Bottlehead Forum
Bottlehead Kits => Crack => Topic started by: El Tel on November 23, 2024, 03:38:57 AM
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Hi Everyone
I've a new problem with my Crack/Speedball
I inadvertently moved the 12 AU7 valve the other day whilst wearing my headphones and a VERY loud buzz/vibration came out of the right hand channel only for a brief moment, scared the life out of me. Anyway I turned the volume down to minimum and tentatively moved the valve again and the same keeps happening. Its not there all the time (which is just as well as I think it would damage the headphones), it's only for the briefest of moments every time i move the valve in it's socket, but I'm worried if this suddenly found it's spot where it introduces this noise and stayed on.
I've tried another valve and the same occurs.
Any Ideas ?
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Look for a loose connection on the tube socket.
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Thank you for your reply Doc.
I've had time to have a look at the tube socket wiring this morning, and I noticed that one of the LEDs wasn't on, I moved the tube in it's socket which caused the LED to come back on but also reintroduced the loud buzz/vibration on the right channel.
Now that LED won't come on at all now, but the Amp is still playing out of both channels in the headphones (albeit the right channel is down on volume) .
Look forward to your thoughts again.
Many Thanks
Terry
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You may recall that I was talking about loose connections in my post. Did you look closely for loose connections? Typically a loud buzz means that a connection to ground has come loose. The LED being on, then off, the buzz coming and going, etc. could indicate that some connection is intermittent. Carefully nudging the connections with something insulated like a pencil or a wooden chopstick while the amp is on can help you to locate the exact point where the connection is flaky.
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Hi Doc
I didn't really get to test for loose connections on the tube socket, as I was distracted by the fact that one of the LEDs was out, and by wiggling the tube it came back on.
I guess that the centre pin connection is OK, as surely both LEDs would be out ? I need to check the other end of the LED that was intermittent, great idea with the chopstick!
I've ordered some LEDs incase that one is shot and I'll take another look next weekend, have a good evening, and I'll let you know the outcome 👍
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I didn't really get to test for loose connections on the tube socket, as I was distracted by the fact that one of the LEDs was out, and by wiggling the tube it came back on.
I guess that the centre pin connection is OK, as surely both LEDs would be out ?
If the LED that is turning on and off is not well connected at the center pin, then this could cause your issue.
It is worth noting that any of the connections on the 9 pin socket related to that half of the 12AU7 could cause the LED to turn on and off, and even some of the parts on the adjacent 5 lug terminal strip. It would be a mistake to remove and replace the LED that is turning on and off over and over again without doing the chopstick test to determine what's actually not well connected.
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Great Advice Paul, I'll certainly go through it all this coming weekend, now where are those chopsticks 😀
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Morning guys
I've just replaced the failed LED on the ECC 82 socket and it's still not lighting up.
I have now noticed that two of the LEDs on the small pcb of the Speedball are not lighting up also (on the OA side), should I go ahead and replace these too ?
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Don't look for the issue with the leds themselves. The fact they're not lighting up is a symptom, not the problem.
Make sure both halves of your ECC82 are lighting up (could be one half is out?).
If all OK solder the center pin of the transistor again on the side that the leds aren't lighting up.
If all checks out, start with voltage checks and post here.
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Morning guys
I've just replaced the failed LED on the ECC 82 socket and it's still not lighting up.
I have now noticed that two of the LEDs on the small pcb of the Speedball are not lighting up also (on the OA side), should I go ahead and replace these too ?
I never saw any reason to believe the LED needed to be replaced.
I have now noticed that two of the LEDs on the small pcb of the Speedball are not lighting up also (on the OA side), should I go ahead and replace these too ?
No!
Please post the OA and OB voltages on the front C4S board.
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Ok, this is where I'm at, so far.
OA is 180 OB is 66
Also, the voltages on the terminals read as follows,
Terminal 1 = 180
Terminal 2 = 182
Terminal 3 = 0
Terminal 4 = 182
Terminal 5 = 66
Terminal 6 = 0
Terminal 7 = 178
Terminal 8 = 0
Terminal 9 = 103
Terminal 10 = 0
As to regards the LEDs, I have
The four on the Speedball large board - all 4 on.
The four on the small Speedball board - D1 (A side) is on and bright. D2 (A side) not on.
D1 (B side) on but dim
D2 (B side) on but dim
Thanks
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Carefully measure the DC voltage at A8?
If you see ~12V here, then you do indeed have an issue with the LED there.
If you see 0V here, then you'd want to look at the tube itself while the amp is on to be sure both halves of the tube are glowing. If they aren't, then you probably have a bad solder joint at A4/A5 that isn't allowing both halves of the tube to heat up.
If this Speedball was freshly installed, we would also remind you that the center legs of the MJE350 transistors are difficult to solder properly and require some extra heating.
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Hi Paul
Thanks for your reply.
Really not sure what is going on as I did a few voltage tests around the 6080 tube socket, and when I tested B1 I got a spark and now don't have any reading (zero volts) at OA on the Speedball board and at B1.
I tested A8 and there is 0.8 of a volt.
I'm tempted to buy a new set of valves to see if that sorts things out.
PS This is not a new Speedball installation, it's been up and running since about 2 years or so ago with no problems until I accidentally moved the au7 valve and noticed a loud buzz every time the valve was jiggled.
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I'm tempted to buy a new set of valves to see if that sorts things out.
What is leading you to believe the tubes are bad?
You will need to do a voltage check on terminals 1-10 for us to proceed any further. It's possible that the fuse has blown in your amp when the arc was drawn.
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Morning Paul
I've checked the voltages and here's what they are
1 = 0 volts
2 = 200
3 = 0
4 = 200
5= 69
6= 0 Volts
7 = 70
8 = 0
9 = 111
10 = 0
Checked the fuse and that's all good
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Can you post some build photos?
You can also try rotating the small speedball board up front 180 degrees so that the halves are flipped around feeding opposite portions of the circuit. If the 0V follows the half of the PC board you're seeing it on now, then you know there's an issue on the PC board. If the 0V stays put in the amp, then there's something wrong with the underlying build that needs to be addressed.
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Hi Paul
How do I upload photos ?
Terry
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Reply, attachments and other options, attach: choose file.
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Here you go Paul
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There are lots of cold solder joints in those photos. If your soldering iron has temperature adjustment, turn it all the way up. If your solder doesn't have lead in it, I would get some leaded solder.
The first step would be reheating all of the joints in this kit aside from those where LEDs are mounted (they are somewhat sensitive to being reheated after they have been sitting around for a long time).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EN16Pi7pcfk (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EN16Pi7pcfk)
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Hi Paul
I thought I'd also check the resistors on the Speedball small board, the 237 ohm 1/8 watt resistor on the good side of the board is reading 237 ohms as expected but the other 237 ohm on the side of the board where there's no volts at OA is reading 0 ohms, do you think this could be why there's no reading at OA ?
Obviously I'm going to have to change it, but i can only find 240R 1/8 watt here in the UK, are these OK?
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I wouldn't change that resistor necessarily.
Your meter has a setting where it will beep when touching the leads together. Get it setup to do this, then start touching pairs of leads on each transistor on that side of the board, then you may run into a pair of leads that's shorted out.
It's pretty rare for a resistor to short to 0 ohms, so I'd be looking for an external issue causing this problem.
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Hi Paul
I've done the tests on the transistors on the bad side of the pcb and yes they both have continuity, and buzz on the multimeter.
Can you let me know if these are the ones that I need to order as I'm in the UK.
https://www.digikey.co.uk/en/products/detail/central-semiconductor-corp/PN2907A-PBFREE/4806938?_gl=1*1sf5dg5*_up*MQ..*_gs*MQ..&gclid=Cj0KCQiAgdC6BhCgARIsAPWNWH0i2a-r8WVvCzaFxJjLPlQQksmUUl4V6LA11_TE-SxLiJjdtscIm2oaAmRAEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds
https://www.digikey.co.uk/en/products/detail/good-ark-semiconductor/MJE350/24613252?_gl=1*b0yvy7*_up*MQ..*_gs*MQ..&gclid=Cj0KCQiAgdC6BhCgARIsAPWNWH0i2a-r8WVvCzaFxJjLPlQQksmUUl4V6LA11_TE-SxLiJjdtscIm2oaAmRAEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds
Many Thanks
Terry
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Those will work.
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Hi Paul
A quick update, it's all OK again, all reading measure as they should again.
Turned out that replacement of the two Transistors and the 237 ohm resistor seemed to do the trick.
Thank you everyone 👍
Ps - I learnt a little along the way too, so all in all what's not to like 😉