fullreleaseblake
Member
Well, I got to my practice facility to pick up all of my bands equipment for a show that evening, and my drummer told me to go look inside and that I probably wasn't going to be happy with what I saw. I walked in to see my Dual Roadster head sitting on the floor with his fan blowing it off :shock: Needless to say, we had a water leak, and the only thing that got wet was my head. I had the cover on it, but with the vent grate they put on top of the amp, once the cover fully saturated, it probably leaked through the vent onto the electronics chassis. I let the fan blow on it for the entire time that I was loading up, then when I got to the club we were playing at, I sat the head upside down on my cab to see if any water would come out of the chassis where the tubes are seated. After about 10 mins, I check to make sure nothing was coming out of the chassis, turned it rightside up, and powered it on with my fingures crossed. The power light came on, and when I walked over to the footswitch to toggle throught the channels, I head a pop, pop, crackle, crackle, and the power light on the head went out, with that burnt electrical smell. I checked and the fuse near the power cord had blown. Luckly I never got rid of my Line6 SpiderValve head, and my wife was able to bring it to the club we were playing at. Now, I haven't powered that head up (the Line6) since I got it back from Line6 for warrenty work about 8 months ago. Thank god it worked.
Tonight I'm going to go home and remove the chassis from the head case and inspect the electronics to see if anything has burnt up (I'm crossing my fingers in the hopes that the fuse blowing was the most damage sustained). Has anyone delt with this kind of issue before, and is there any advise that could be offered if you have? The storage facility owner said he would cover any damages seeing as he was working on the roof last week, and left a couple of screws out (which is what casued the leak to begin with).
Tonight I'm going to go home and remove the chassis from the head case and inspect the electronics to see if anything has burnt up (I'm crossing my fingers in the hopes that the fuse blowing was the most damage sustained). Has anyone delt with this kind of issue before, and is there any advise that could be offered if you have? The storage facility owner said he would cover any damages seeing as he was working on the roof last week, and left a couple of screws out (which is what casued the leak to begin with).