T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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773.1 | Me too.... | VIDEO::BUSENBARK | | Fri Aug 12 1988 15:08 | 13 |
| I have had similiar problems with tube amps,and unfortunately
have learned to live with it. To speculate I would guess that your
amp has an unregulated power supply which is drifting with the
AC line voltage in your house or you may find the power supply
rectifier tube(5u4,Gz34/5ar4) has had a problem from the first
day you bought the amp. I replaced my tube with a solid state
equivalent and have seemed to sound more consistent. If line voltage
is really the problem then a Variac may help your problem,but this
is both costly and just one more thing to carry....
R
|
773.2 | same here | DRUID::RANDERSON | | Fri Aug 12 1988 17:31 | 11 |
| I've experienced this also. I thought maybe its humidity related,
maybe it's due to hearing a certain tone on the car radio, house
stereo, etc. that causes me to think my amp sounds different than the last
time I played through it (human ear conditioning????) I've even
experienced this phenomena while playing through my Rockman. One
night everything sounds killer, the next (with no setting changes)
sounds muddy (I have an AC adapter so it's not battery related).
I have no answers for it.
Ron
|
773.3 | In my Boogie, this is correlated to the age of the 6l6's | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Fri Aug 12 1988 18:10 | 15 |
| I've noticed this in my Boogie. It varies from day to day.
However, the problem seems to be reduced significantly with new
power tubes (6L6's).
You didn't mention how old your tubes are, but if they are much
older than a year or two, you may want to replace them. Tubes
last me about a year, but I'm sure it's a function of how much
you use the amp. The more you use it, the more often you need
to replace tubes.
Tubes have lasted me much longer since I started practicing thru
a transister amp.
db
|
773.4 | More "moody" blues... | DRUID::MARIANI | | Mon Aug 15 1988 15:47 | 9 |
| I thought I was the only one hearing (or not hearing) things.
I think maybe the humidity has a lot to do with it. After all a
speaker's made of paper most times. I play all solid state
stuff, so I can't blame it on the tubes. I do notice a tremendous
difference in my acoustic guitar when the weather gets muggy but
I guess that's to be expected. Maybe the actual wood in the electric
gets flaky? I wish I had more answers instead of more questions...
T.
|
773.6 | ...,but I put "old" tubes in my amp! | SALEM::ABATELLI | Set/Mode=No_Think | Tue Aug 16 1988 09:56 | 24 |
| I'm believe the heat and humidity has everything to do with it!
At Bob Nash's "SweatJam '88" I disconnected all my effects one
by one, because nothing was working right! My chorus pedal didn't
sound right, my limiter (which I always use) was killing my volume,
even when I turned the limiter volume up. So I diconnected all the
patch effects and ran the guitar straight through. I felt naked
without the toys, but I had to do something. The next day at home
in a "AC" room, everything worked great! Hmmmmmmmm, something went
wrong somewhere! As far as changing tubes in a tube amp, I use that
to an advantage. I have new (about 10 hrs old) tubes and I have
old tubes (circa 1980). I here all this talk about changing tubes.
A new tube will give you more voltage and clean up your sound, in
my case I use 4 sylvania 6L6 tubes I got with my Peavey Mace amp
in 1980. I look at it like buying "soft" Groove Tubes! When checking
voltage on the amp itself, I find that the "old" tubes produce 78vdc
at the given test points. The "newer" tubes produce 86vdc. The older
tubes give me a smoother saturation. The clean channel isn't
as clean as with the newer tubes, but I like the sound I get. Remember
the old expression, "don't fix something that doesn't need fixing"?
As far as my amp acting strange? I really haven't noticed any real
change in any enviroment whether it be hot, cold, dry, or humid.
I guess I got lucky. As far as my effects? That's a different story.
Fred_who_hopes_his_"old"_tubes_keep_on_working_for_the_next_10_yrs!
|
773.7 | Twin woes | ANT::JACQUES | | Tue Aug 16 1988 09:57 | 34 |
|
The Fender Twin I just bought started acting up on me. I had heard
a few horror stories about them having reliability problems that
required a lengthy trip to the service center. Mine was doing the
runaway hum trick, and was sensitive to any kind of tapping on the
front panel. One night I decided rather than bring it back to
EUW, I would try swapping power tubes since I had some 6l6GC's
kicking around the house. I replaced all four power tubes with
a set that has got to be at least 6 or 7 years old just to see
if it would make a differance. As soon as I replaced the tubes
the problem dissapeared. I can tap on the amp all I want and there
is no more noise problem. I found the rear panel test points are
real handy for setting the bias and balance. All you need is a
DMM to set them correctly.
I called EUW and told them about this problem. I asked them
if I could get a couple of new tubes from them to replace the
bad ones I pulled out. They said that while the amp carries a
1 year warantee, the tubes are only waranteed for 90 days. If
I want new tubes I have to buy them. Eventually, I will probably
replace all the tubes with Groove tubes, or Mesa tubes, but I
would've thought that EUW would take better care of me. Especially
since I spared them from having to mess with it.
I am not used to having to change tubes so often, but I guess
a high-gain amp like this goes through tubes much faster than
a clean sounding amp.
Live and Learn !!!
Mark Jacques
|
773.8 | HEY! I've heard of that! | SALEM::ABATELLI | Set/Mode=No_Think | Tue Aug 16 1988 10:08 | 15 |
| re.7
In the "old" days they called that "tube microphonics".
Fenders have always had this problem. If you're not
sure as to whether or not you have this problem, tap
on your amps face plate at a lower volume, or tap "very gently"
on your tubes one by one. If you hear anything out of the speaker
change that tube. Altho sometimes it's just a dirty tube socket,
I've found that changing the tube usually does it. It is also
wise to balance the amp to the tubes. It saves things in the long
run.
BTW....leave the guitar disconnected when checking this.
Good Luck,
Fred
|
773.9 | tube microphonics | ANT::JACQUES | | Tue Aug 16 1988 22:10 | 33 |
| RE. .7 Your absolutely right, tube microphonic problem. Trouble
is, that the amp would go into major hum mode regardless which
tube you tapped on, or if you tapped on the front panel. First
I replaced 1 pair, and the problem seemed to go away, for a while.
Soon after, it started doing it again, so I changed the other pair.
The amp no longer suffers from this problem (knock on wood), although
I haven't used it at real loud volumes yet.
One problem I have with correlating home practicing to live situations
is that in a live situation the amp is usually pushed back further
and cranked. At home it is closer in front of me and used at lower
volume levels so it is hard to predict what will happen when you
get on stage and start whalin on it. An example of this is the
problem I had (or Tom D. had) with my Telecaster treble pickup
at Sweatjam. At home listening levels the problem was tolerable,
in fact I can get a great controllable feedback with it through
my Pignose or my Twins, but outdoors through a cranked amp, it had
a severe microphonic problem. I am in the process of improving the
grounding on this guitar. If that doesn't work, I will have to
start looking into differant pickups, at least for the lead position.
I am currently using Duncan Quarter pounders. It is also possible
that the lead pickup is not properly potted. If this is the case,
Seymour Duncan has agreed to repair/replace it.
In the immortal words of David Bromberg (who probably stole this
line from some other immortal sole)
"You have to SUFFER, if you want to sing The Blues"
(This person obvious has experience with tube amps)
Mark
|
773.10 | <TONE PROBLEMS> | OTOO01::ELLACOTT | Freddie's Revenge | Thu Aug 18 1988 13:54 | 20 |
| 1. Speakers will change tone greatly with humidity and age. This
may be why the change of some bassists to the Guild/Hartke (sp)
aluminum cone speakers. Jerry Garcia commented on this in last
month's Guitar Player.
2. Cables can cause loss of high end because of capacitance of the
cable itself. This factor does not usually change much over
time. A bad cable (or cheap one) will not improve, so a little
extra money on a cable is worth it (ie Whirlwind etc)
3. Tubes can cuase a lot of funnies, but in general if you are
using the amp a lot change the power tubes, or a least get them
tested once a year. The preamp tubes are usually good for two
three years but should be tested with the others. DON'T move
the amp while the tubes are hot, the internal compents a can
come loose and cause microphonics.
4. Humidity itself can cause high power connections to become corroded
and bring unpredictable problems. Cleaning these connections
(ie reseating the tubes) can correct this.
Hope this helps
Fred
|
773.11 | see GT book | SMOGGY::TURNER | | Wed Apr 17 1991 14:12 | 3 |
| see note 396.18 : the Groove Tube book has a troubleshooting section
Paul
|
773.12 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Wed Apr 17 1991 14:21 | 4 |
| Okay, after four or five notes referring to your original note (396.18)
we got the picture... ;)
jc (wearing his moderator hat)
|