Danavenell
Member
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2010
- Messages
- 5
- Reaction score
- 0
Hi, hope someone can point me in the right direction: I was playing through the clean (rhythm) channel on my Studio 22+ earlier today, when I took a short break, leaving the amp on the clean channel.
Came back a few minutes later, and noticed the red LED was off on the footswitch, and that it had switched to the lead channel. "Hmm, strange" I thought. I stepped on the footswitch to change it back to rhythm, and...nothing. Stayed on the lead channel.
I unplugged the lead from the footswitch, then put it back in - the red LED came on briefly, accompanied by the noise from the amp changing, then it faded. The switch is now completely ineffective.
Now, if I unplug the footswitch from the amp, it switches back to the rhythm channel, and switches to lead again if I plug it back in. So, I can still switch channels by plugging in/un-plugging the footswitch, but not by the normal method of operating the footswitch.
Am I correct in thinking that it's probably the switch at fault (as opposed to a circuit in the amp) as it's still possible to change channels by using the above method?
If so, is it likely to be repairable or am I probably looking at a new footswitch? And if so does it have to be a Mesa Boogie one?
Cheers!
Came back a few minutes later, and noticed the red LED was off on the footswitch, and that it had switched to the lead channel. "Hmm, strange" I thought. I stepped on the footswitch to change it back to rhythm, and...nothing. Stayed on the lead channel.
I unplugged the lead from the footswitch, then put it back in - the red LED came on briefly, accompanied by the noise from the amp changing, then it faded. The switch is now completely ineffective.
Now, if I unplug the footswitch from the amp, it switches back to the rhythm channel, and switches to lead again if I plug it back in. So, I can still switch channels by plugging in/un-plugging the footswitch, but not by the normal method of operating the footswitch.
Am I correct in thinking that it's probably the switch at fault (as opposed to a circuit in the amp) as it's still possible to change channels by using the above method?
If so, is it likely to be repairable or am I probably looking at a new footswitch? And if so does it have to be a Mesa Boogie one?
Cheers!