sizzling when switching standby??faulty vol pot

Overdrive Special, Steel String Singer, Dumbleland, Odyssey, Winterland, etc. -
Members Only

Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal

Post Reply
grumpy
Posts: 21
Joined: Wed Jun 07, 2006 4:06 am
Location: Australia

sizzling when switching standby??faulty vol pot

Post by grumpy »

Hi all
My D style amp (hybrid A based) has developed a strange fault. When I switch the standby on, I get a sizzling/fryingpan sound for a few seconds. I am assuming that it is something to do with the B+ reaching it's operating point, when it gets to it's quiescent state the sizzling stops and the amp is acceptably quiet. I currently have a 390ohm resistor in place of the choke and when I play a loud passage and then stop I can hear the sizzling for a short period. I am guessing that because the voltage sags when I play loudly,I get the sizzle when I stop and the B+ goes up again.
Has anyone had this problem? I have replaced some components around the V1 stage as the sizzle is not present with V1 pulled. The fault seems to be centred around CL2 as with the CL1 plate resistor disconnected I still get sizzle when turning standby on or off. I suspect that the CL2 feedback network may have something to do with it but I have replaced all components in the loop and there has been no improvement.
Anyone have any thoughts or ideas???? I don't seem to be getting anywhere and I've been trying to pinpoint this issue for a few days.

Cheers, John
Last edited by grumpy on Tue Aug 29, 2006 1:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Darkbluemurder
Posts: 584
Joined: Tue Jan 03, 2006 7:28 pm

Re: sizzling when switching standby??faulty vol pot

Post by Darkbluemurder »

I doubt that the fault is with the feedback network. To be sure remove it and see if the sizzle is still there. If it is you can be sure that the loop has nothing to do with it.

I would suspect the plate load resistor of CL2 and/or a bad tube in V1.

Good luck
Stephan
User avatar
ayan
Posts: 1340
Joined: Thu Mar 02, 2006 9:04 pm
Location: Los Angeles, CA

Re: sizzling when switching standby??

Post by ayan »

grumpy wrote:Hi all
My D style amp (hybrid A based) has developed a strange fault. When I switch the standby on, I get a sizzling/fryingpan sound for a few seconds. I am assuming that it is something to do with the B+ reaching it's operating point, when it gets to it's quiescent state the sizzling stops and the amp is acceptably quiet. I currently have a 390ohm resistor in place of the choke and when I play a loud passage and then stop I can hear the sizzling for a short period. I am guessing that because the voltage sags when I play loudly,I get the sizzle when I stop and the B+ goes up again.
Has anyone had this problem? I have replaced some components around the V1 stage as the sizzle is not present with V1 pulled. The fault seems to be centred around CL2 as with the CL1 plate resistor disconnected I still get sizzle when turning standby on or off. I suspect that the CL2 feedback network may have something to do with it but I have replaced all components in the loop and there has been no improvement.
Anyone have any thoughts or ideas???? I don't seem to be getting anywhere and I've been trying to pinpoint this issue for a few days.

Cheers, John
I would suggest you try a new set of screen grid resistors....

Gil
User avatar
skyboltone
Posts: 2287
Joined: Wed May 10, 2006 7:02 pm
Location: Sparks, NV, where nowhere looks like home.

Re: sizzling when switching standby??

Post by skyboltone »

ayan wrote: I would suggest you try a new set of screen grid resistors....

Gil
Hey, are you guys using wirewounds here or metal films. Seems like a scary place to be adding inductance, but I'll sure go with the consensus.

Dan
The Last of the World's Great Human Beings
Seek immediate medical attention if you suddenly go either deaf or blind.
If you put the Federal Government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in five years time there would be a shortage of sand.
User avatar
ayan
Posts: 1340
Joined: Thu Mar 02, 2006 9:04 pm
Location: Los Angeles, CA

Re: sizzling when switching standby??

Post by ayan »

skyboltone wrote:
ayan wrote: I would suggest you try a new set of screen grid resistors....

Gil
Hey, are you guys using wirewounds here or metal films. Seems like a scary place to be adding inductance, but I'll sure go with the consensus.

Dan

I use "cement blocks," which are wirewounds, as did Marshall. In one of Kevin O'Connor's books, he suggests that this is a good idea because it adds some desireable inductance. I can't remember exactly what the rationale offered was.

Gil
User avatar
Bob-I
Posts: 3791
Joined: Thu Feb 02, 2006 10:06 pm
Location: Hillsborough NJ

Re: sizzling when switching standby??

Post by Bob-I »

ayan wrote:
skyboltone wrote:
ayan wrote: I would suggest you try a new set of screen grid resistors....

Gil
Hey, are you guys using wirewounds here or metal films. Seems like a scary place to be adding inductance, but I'll sure go with the consensus.

Dan

I use "cement blocks," which are wirewounds, as did Marshall. In one of Kevin O'Connor's books, he suggests that this is a good idea because it adds some desireable inductance. I can't remember exactly what the rationale offered was.

Gil
I've been using 2 watt metal films to avoid inductance. I'd like to see his reason.
thejaf
Posts: 113
Joined: Mon Jul 24, 2006 12:43 pm

Re: sizzling when switching standby??faulty vol pot

Post by thejaf »

I had the exact same problem on a combo amp. It was an old Guild from the 50's that was gutted and modified. Everything was new except for the power and standby switches. It turned out to tbe the 50-year old standby switch, which wasn't making a very good connection.
mlp-mx6
Posts: 1111
Joined: Sat Feb 04, 2006 4:24 pm
Location: NW Atlanta

Re: sizzling when switching standby??

Post by mlp-mx6 »

Bob-I wrote:I've been using 2 watt metal films to avoid inductance. I'd like to see his reason.
IIRC, the reason is the "ever so slight" smoothing of the ripple that the inductance offers. Like a very small choke for the screen supply, right there on each screen!

Not saying it works, or that it does not work. But I'm pretty sure that was the rationale.

Michael
Wife: How many amps do you need?
Me: Just one more...
grumpy
Posts: 21
Joined: Wed Jun 07, 2006 4:06 am
Location: Australia

Re: sizzling when switching standby??faulty vol pot

Post by grumpy »

Well thanks for the suggestions guys! I appreciate it. After trying everything suggested with no luck, I went through the whole front end of the amp, reflowing just about all the solders, replaced the whole dropping string along with a bucketload of other things. The last thing I would have suspected was the Pots, but, It turned out to be a faulty Vol Pot? It was a brand new Alpha. I don't know in what way it's faulty but there you go!
The odd thing is I can't quite make sense of why it caused the symptoms that were there. The sizzling was exactly as described in my first post, and was much reduced with the CL2 local feedback switched out, I think I replaced that network three times!!
Anyway it's fixed!! Ya F..ing Hoo. The amp is also generally quieter than it was before too, so it's all good.

Cheers, John
User avatar
skyboltone
Posts: 2287
Joined: Wed May 10, 2006 7:02 pm
Location: Sparks, NV, where nowhere looks like home.

Re: sizzling when switching standby??faulty vol pot

Post by skyboltone »

grumpy wrote:Well thanks for the suggestions guys! I appreciate it. After trying everything suggested with no luck, I went through the whole front end of the amp, reflowing just about all the solders, replaced the whole dropping string along with a bucketload of other things. The last thing I would have suspected was the Pots, but, It turned out to be a faulty Vol Pot? It was a brand new Alpha. I don't know in what way it's faulty but there you go!
The odd thing is I can't quite make sense of why it caused the symptoms that were there. The sizzling was exactly as described in my first post, and was much reduced with the CL2 local feedback switched out, I think I replaced that network three times!!
Anyway it's fixed!! Ya F..ing Hoo. The amp is also generally quieter than it was before too, so it's all good.

Cheers, John
Hi John:
This here is a WAG, and remember I'm frequently full of it but, I've had pots taken out by faulty/leaky blocking caps in old radios I've worked on.

Dan
The Last of the World's Great Human Beings
Seek immediate medical attention if you suddenly go either deaf or blind.
If you put the Federal Government in charge of the Sahara Desert, in five years time there would be a shortage of sand.
User avatar
Bob-I
Posts: 3791
Joined: Thu Feb 02, 2006 10:06 pm
Location: Hillsborough NJ

Re: sizzling when switching standby??faulty vol pot

Post by Bob-I »

skyboltone wrote: Hi John:
This here is a WAG, and remember I'm frequently full of it but, I've had pots taken out by faulty/leaky blocking caps in old radios I've worked on.

Dan
That's exactly what I was thinking. I had that happen recently on my Super Reverb clone. I'd check if there's any DC voltage on that pot just to be safe.
grumpy
Posts: 21
Joined: Wed Jun 07, 2006 4:06 am
Location: Australia

Re: sizzling when switching standby??faulty vol pot

Post by grumpy »

Thanks blokes. Yes that's possibly what happened. I have replaced pretty much all the coupling/tone caps in the front end as I thought the sizzling was from a leaky cap originally and the Vol pot was making that heavy breathing kind of sound when you turned it. There doesn't seem to be any DC there now but it's quite possible that there was previously although I did check for it as one of the first things I did and I cant remember there being more than a few millivolts. I think I'll check it all out again just to make sure.

Cheers John
Post Reply