Trouble with my Quad Preamp lead channel 1 neede advice!

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mxr2000

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I am having trouble with my quad Channel 1 lead "completely dead".. Mine its a 1986 model and look like never been service after almost 26 years.. So i was thinking about take it to a local tech and doing a complete overhaul service to the preamp.. So need some good advise on what parts should i get and what should i do. Probably i would need to get all the parts myself so if you are all kind to tell me some place on line to get it, i would be very grateful. I live on Puerto Rico so parts aren't available on my area!!!
 
This could simply comes from a bad tube. Try swapping V13 and V23 (these are the lead tubes for channel 1 and channel 2). After that if lead 1 is ok and lead 2 dead, it's the tube.
 
crane said:
This could simply comes from a bad tube. Try swapping V13 and V23 (these are the lead tubes for channel 1 and channel 2). After that if lead 1 is ok and lead 2 dead, it's the tube.
not bad tubes thats the first thing that i change on my preamp the tubes! but still experiencing the same problem !!!
 
Maybe a plate resistor on V23. They can sometimes fail.
 
crane said:
Maybe a plate resistor on V23. They can sometimes fail.
maybe is something like that but the true is that my preamp is from 1986 and sooner or later something else will fail for lack of maintenance (re cap,ld's change,etc,etc).. Can you help or somebody else find an ON-line place to get all the parts that i need besides Mesa Boogie ?
 
You want to change everything in the Quad ? That will cost you some money !
LDR will fail one day or another, so you can change them (150-200$), power filter cap too (20$).
But I would personally not change anything else without a failure. Resistors can last forever, audio cap last very long too, especially because Mesa used to build stuff with component with a great derating (every component is "oversized" for its use, for example audio cap that support 600V although there is no more than 300V).
 
+1 plate resistor.

Check for correct resistance/continuity from 450V rail (big cap) into pin 1 and pin 6 of V23 socket thru the 82k and 270k resisitors respectively. I bet one of them is open circuit. Snap the culprit in half with needle nose pliers then solder a new resistor onto the legs of the old one. 10 minute fix if you're good with an iron. Just promise you'll unplug from mains first!

I ran mine like that for nearly a year before LDR issues forced me to do a proper job. Don't worry about reliabilty and don't attempt to change everything, re. Crane: He speaks the truth.

http://tubefreak.com/s-lead.gif
 
I get it, see your point guys, will take it to the tech with this info and hope this would do it!!! :) Thanks :D
 

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