Why is this amp blowing tubes???
Moderators: greatmutah, GuitarBilly
- mrelusive
- Hall of Fame Member
- Posts: 610
- Joined: Sun Jan 20, 2013 9:35 am
- Location: up a goddamn mountain.
Why is this amp blowing tubes???
A friend left an Egnater Tourmaster 4212 at my place for me to check out. I have replaced the preamp tube for the second gain stage at least three times. It'll sound fine, but you can't get much volume out of it... What up wit dat?!
"You forget, this is HCAF, where everyone thinks like Stephen Hawking, fights like Manny Pacquiao, pulls trim like Justin Timberlake, and emotes like The Terminator...as long as it's someone else's dog who died" -Benjamin801
Droppin similes like i got holes in my pants pockets.
Droppin similes like i got holes in my pants pockets.
Re: Why is this amp blowing tubes???
soundgardener75 wrote:Check the fuse maybe?

the only thing i can think of is that something is allowing too much current through that tube...that points to a short or shorting cathode resistor or bypass cap. i'd suspect a cap before the resistor, but with the values that most companies use both should be stupid over rated. could be a bad solder joint somewhere, or something wrong with the socket as well.
- gb74
- Hall of Fame Member
- Posts: 538
- Joined: Mon Jan 21, 2013 12:51 pm
- Location: Tarzana, CA
- Contact:
Re: Why is this amp blowing tubes???
well a bad tube would cause the fuse to blow but not the reverse. My first guess would be a cold solder joint that is causing the amp to short out and killing the tube. It could also be a bad cap or resistor that is sending too much current to the tube.
Finally, it could also be severe bad luck, but since it happened 3 times in the same spot, I doubt it.
At any rate, this seems to be a case for a tech, it will be hard to figure this one out with basic troubleshooting.
Finally, it could also be severe bad luck, but since it happened 3 times in the same spot, I doubt it.
At any rate, this seems to be a case for a tech, it will be hard to figure this one out with basic troubleshooting.
Re: Why is this amp blowing tubes???
Pretty much what zach said. Most obvious thing would be blown plate load or cathode resistor. If the plate load has failed open then the load line will shoot straight through the max dissipation curve and cook the plate. A leaky coupling cap could put a lot of DC on the grid but that isn't always a problem depending on what the stage is doing. A bum grid leak resistor could screw the bias too, causing it overheat the plate.
Loop wrote:I’m currently shopping for a 1996 Red Dodge Viper with yellow wheels. Who gives a shit about taste?!
Re: Why is this amp blowing tubes???
I would open it up and look at the connections of the tube socket itself. make sure none of the solder lugs are touching the chassis. there have been a lot of sub par 9 pin preamp tube sockets made and used.
- elder_things
- Registered Member
- Posts: 30
- Joined: Sun Jan 20, 2013 6:16 pm
Re: Why is this amp blowing tubes???
Like these guys have said, probably a surrounding component. Would be a good idea to make your voltage checks.
- mrelusive
- Hall of Fame Member
- Posts: 610
- Joined: Sun Jan 20, 2013 9:35 am
- Location: up a goddamn mountain.
Re: Why is this amp blowing tubes???
ah shit... well, i'll prolly call around tomorrow and see if anyone can work on it locally
"You forget, this is HCAF, where everyone thinks like Stephen Hawking, fights like Manny Pacquiao, pulls trim like Justin Timberlake, and emotes like The Terminator...as long as it's someone else's dog who died" -Benjamin801
Droppin similes like i got holes in my pants pockets.
Droppin similes like i got holes in my pants pockets.
Re: Why is this amp blowing tubes???
Zozobra wrote:Pretty much what zach said. Most obvious thing would be blown plate load or cathode resistor. If the plate load has failed open then the load line will shoot straight through the max dissipation curve and cook the plate. A leaky coupling cap could put a lot of DC on the grid but that isn't always a problem depending on what the stage is doing. A bum grid leak resistor could screw the bias too, causing it overheat the plate.
think real hard about why an open plate resistor won't hurt a tube

since he's not reporting weird noise or blocking distortion, i doubt it's a faulty grid leak or leaky coupling cap.
also, we don't know the nature of the failure...is the filament still lighting? have you tried the "bad" preamp tubes in other spots in the amp to eliminate socket specific issues?