It actually took about 6 hours of surgery, but in the end, she's gonna make it!
Still a couple of small bugs to work out, but everything seems to work so far. I haven't had a chance to try the Loop yet though!
I found a few blown up resistors, a few with heat damage, a few that looked good but didn't measure right, and quite a few bad diodes that looked good on the outside.
It took out the entire power supply for the channel switching circuit, and the filament resistors, and part of the bias circuit.
It sucks that the easiest mistakes can cause so much damage!
You should find a new tech too. There were physically obvious things that he should not have missed. He should have also put a meter across the O. T. to find out that it was something hidden and not the obvious. I'm not pointing fingers, but you would be better served elswhere. It still wouldn't have worked after replacing the obvious stuff, but when resistors and diodes are blown in half and there is smoke on the circuit board, it's a good starting point.
Save your money and send your baby to me next time!
Those are pretty much the settings that I was planning on starting with. I had a couple of Rev. G's in the past.
I seem to remember that one of them had a decent clean channel, but the newer one didn't. At the time, I didn't know enough about tube amps to realize what a difference new tubes would make.
Any other suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
I love the lead channel with the gain at 12 and the presence cranked with my 7 string! It sounds heavy like a mother!!!!!!!!!!