If you are talking of plastics moulding mark then the "hour" of the pointer
is the month of the castings in 2010
>speaking of stupid symbols, what's the circle with an arrow possibly
>indicating some sort of rotation and a number "10" inside mean?
>
Probably just one of the old amps where the volume does not go up to
11.
"N_Cook" <div...@tcp.co.uk> wrote in message
news:j6mvlo$r6p$1...@dont-email.me...
Saw one of these a while ago and had to hard wire the ribbon cable between
pre-amp/power amp boards as it had arced/burnt the connectors.
One thing I particularly remember is the OPT input feed is connected via a
plug and socket to the output PCB and, unlike most Peavey units, it is
possible to connect this the wrong way round. This will result in all sorts
of weird feedback/oscillations, particularly when playing with the
"resonance" pot on the back panel.
This amp cost me a lot of time and frustration.
Gareth.
At least the OPT wires are proper 500V rating. I ' ve now marked that
connector JIC.
I imagine your ribbon problem was initially the euro-crap solder inside.
I've pared off the HT wire and spiral wrapped some sleeving around it. The
wiring to the standby switch will go the other side of the main caps not
over the replaced 400R 10W dropper that had exploded to 3 bits in the
conflagration.
"N_Cook" <div...@tcp.co.uk> wrote in message
news:j6rjni$413$1...@dont-email.me...
I think it was actually the heater circuit that burnt the connector
contacts, though I'm not 100% sure of that.
I've seen this same burning on other equipment too, usually the high current
PSU connectors, (Molex?).
Gareth.
A good cleaning and use of antioxidant electrical compound on the
connections usually helps there.
Jamie
Over time sprung connections loose their spring. Sorted out someone's
favourite amp last week, a number of crimp spade connectors inside, cut off
and soldered in , should be fine for another 20 years
I was wondering about the current rating through the ribbon for the op
heaters but they are daisy-chained and then awkwardly connected to the pre
heaters, confusingly.
As this is only 6 months old perhaps a stock fault previously , the ribbon
here is soldered either end
"N_Cook" <div...@tcp.co.uk> wrote in message
news:j6ulsp$1qm$1...@dont-email.me...
I seem to remember something odd about the heater circuit - is there not
some kind of series/parallel thing going on?
I seem to recall you can't pull one or more of the pre-amp tubes to leave
just the phase splitter and o/p valves working.
It's possible I'm confusing this with another amp, but you have just rung a
bell in my head.
Gareth.
"Gareth Magennis" <sound....@btconnect.com> wrote in message
news:0gKkq.2162$zH1...@newsfe20.ams2...
Hmm, check the schematic here if you don't have one. (can't be arsed to
seek further)
http://forums.peavey.com/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=17478&start=0
Seems the 4 o/p valves AND the phase splitter heaters are all in series.
Got that wrong in my last post - you can't remove the output valves and see
what the phase splitter is doing.
Not sure what or why is going on with V1 and V2, but I seem to recall if you
pull the wrong one, the other gets a double dose of heater voltage so be
careful.
Note also the feedback comes from the OPT output connected resonance and
presence circuit. Hence the mega problems if the OPT input is connected out
of phase.
This amp did cost me a lot of time, and it seems it is still doing so.
Gareth.
yes very odd , at first sight all valve heaters pa and prea, .9A and .3A are
daisy-chained in series but there is another ps tap off point labelled 6V or
6V1 for the high current tubes
Maybe that's so they can use Mickey Mouse connectors/PCB traces at 1 amp
capacity rather than have to hand wire proper heavy duty wires.
Whatever, it doesn't seem to work very well.
Makes a bit more sense now though, cheers.
Gareth.