woodbutcher65
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- May 4, 2018
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So I've been searching for a Mark III Blue Stripe, long head preferred, for some time....and it turns out that one of my friends who's an amp collector just happens to have one and it's not working right.
So we work out a trade agreement, subject to my being able to fix it.
He brings it over. I hook it up, plug it in, power it up, and the telltale hum of a massive power tube imbalance is evident in seconds. And I see both tubes on one side of the OT start to red plate.
There are FOUR possible reasons for red plating.
Lack of adequate bias current. With this amp, there's about a 0.0001 percent chance of this affecting only half the power tubes.
There's literally no component that can fail that would affect bias voltage to more than a single tube, those being the 220K resistors that
provide the bias to the outermost (EL34) tube sockets.
Shorted power tube. Not so likely that two will do it at the same time.
Open screen resistor(s) but they'd be on a per tube basis.
Shorted 0.1 uF coupling capacitor.
A quick side to side tube swap rules out bad power tubes but I'm not going to rely on tubes that I saw red plating.
Meter checks of the screen resistors indicates no problems with them.
The 0.1 caps are 400 volt rated Orange Drops. Overkill. WHY? That's only bias voltage in this circuit, 100 volt rated caps are more than sufficient.
I'm also suspicious because they ARE orange drops. Great capacitors, yes, but I've seen a lot fail when used as coupling capacitors to the power tubes.
So I replace the pair of 0.1s with a pair of Panasonic 0.1 250 volt caps, put the tubes back in, hook up, hit the power, and pray as only an electronics technician can pray.
Success. Bullseye. Amp runs great, just needs some pots cleaned. It's been running for a couple hours now and the trade has been done.
The point of this is to define red plating/bias issues, as pertaining to Mark IIIs.
There are only four causes of this problem. The amp is VERY easy to troubleshoot in any event there is redplating or a loud hum.
To reiterate:
Shorted output tube
No bias supply
Open screen resistor (or way high off value)
Leaky coupling capacitors.
I hope this saves someone a lot of time dealing with a cranky Mark III with a red plating tube problem.
So we work out a trade agreement, subject to my being able to fix it.
He brings it over. I hook it up, plug it in, power it up, and the telltale hum of a massive power tube imbalance is evident in seconds. And I see both tubes on one side of the OT start to red plate.
There are FOUR possible reasons for red plating.
Lack of adequate bias current. With this amp, there's about a 0.0001 percent chance of this affecting only half the power tubes.
There's literally no component that can fail that would affect bias voltage to more than a single tube, those being the 220K resistors that
provide the bias to the outermost (EL34) tube sockets.
Shorted power tube. Not so likely that two will do it at the same time.
Open screen resistor(s) but they'd be on a per tube basis.
Shorted 0.1 uF coupling capacitor.
A quick side to side tube swap rules out bad power tubes but I'm not going to rely on tubes that I saw red plating.
Meter checks of the screen resistors indicates no problems with them.
The 0.1 caps are 400 volt rated Orange Drops. Overkill. WHY? That's only bias voltage in this circuit, 100 volt rated caps are more than sufficient.
I'm also suspicious because they ARE orange drops. Great capacitors, yes, but I've seen a lot fail when used as coupling capacitors to the power tubes.
So I replace the pair of 0.1s with a pair of Panasonic 0.1 250 volt caps, put the tubes back in, hook up, hit the power, and pray as only an electronics technician can pray.
Success. Bullseye. Amp runs great, just needs some pots cleaned. It's been running for a couple hours now and the trade has been done.
The point of this is to define red plating/bias issues, as pertaining to Mark IIIs.
There are only four causes of this problem. The amp is VERY easy to troubleshoot in any event there is redplating or a loud hum.
To reiterate:
Shorted output tube
No bias supply
Open screen resistor (or way high off value)
Leaky coupling capacitors.
I hope this saves someone a lot of time dealing with a cranky Mark III with a red plating tube problem.