DGNGuitars
New member
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2011
- Messages
- 3
- Reaction score
- 0
Hello all. A friend of mine brought me his Mark I from 77 to see if I could get it up and running. I build custom guitars and do high end repairs on all stringed instruments but generally stay away from regular amp repair, only for good customers. I have a basic knowledge of tube amps and can generally get most Fender/Marshall types up and running really well. I also built my own Marshall Type amps that I gig with on a regular basis. Since I am not too familiar with Boogie amps, I was hoping some of you would be able to help me out.
First off, it came in with half of the tubes missing. I put in a full set of new tubes and because of the age, I did the filter caps and bias cap as well.
After I finished the work, I fired up the amp. Immediately I got this low pitched hum. I shut it down after a little bit and checked around the power section. Sure enough there was a cracked grid resistor. I replaced both grid resistors and fired it back up again after carefully checking over the rest of the amp.
I can hear a faint hum when just the power switch is on, and then when I flip the standby the hum comes straight through the speaker. It is lower than it was before I swapped out the grid resistor though, but still there. It sounds like PT hum or heater hum, but both the 100ohm resistors on the heaters are fine. Also, I am sure the power tubes are still ok because the hum is there will no power tubes installed, amp on standby. The hum is also still there with the power tubes in and all of the preamp tubes pulled.
Anyone have any ideas? Does it sound like a bad PT?
Thanks in advance for any help you can give.
Dan
First off, it came in with half of the tubes missing. I put in a full set of new tubes and because of the age, I did the filter caps and bias cap as well.
After I finished the work, I fired up the amp. Immediately I got this low pitched hum. I shut it down after a little bit and checked around the power section. Sure enough there was a cracked grid resistor. I replaced both grid resistors and fired it back up again after carefully checking over the rest of the amp.
I can hear a faint hum when just the power switch is on, and then when I flip the standby the hum comes straight through the speaker. It is lower than it was before I swapped out the grid resistor though, but still there. It sounds like PT hum or heater hum, but both the 100ohm resistors on the heaters are fine. Also, I am sure the power tubes are still ok because the hum is there will no power tubes installed, amp on standby. The hum is also still there with the power tubes in and all of the preamp tubes pulled.
Anyone have any ideas? Does it sound like a bad PT?
Thanks in advance for any help you can give.
Dan