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look at the Fender Sunn Model T reissue schematic.Ian444 wrote:A simple flashing red LED on the front of the amp to indicate an out of tolerance difference in cathode currents between 2 tubes of a 2-tube PP amp would be nice. Anyone got a simple schem? Just an LED warning to say all is not quite right, take me to the tech.
How 'bout "idiot proofing"?guitarmike2107 wrote:ok .. why are we shooting at our amps anyway... this must be an American thing

I used to have a truly bulletproof guitar - the good ol' Dan Armstrong Plexiglas model. Heavy, toneless, transparent - everything you need in a guitar.selloutrr wrote:I'd think kevlar would be the most effective way to bullet proof an amplifier.Just saying it would work.
Main's voltage doesn't matterStructo wrote:I've been looking around at various amps and their fusing schemes.
Marshalls use HT fuses a lot.
It seems that for 50w amps a 500ma HT fuse is the norm and in a 100w amp a 1 amp fuse is used.
This is for 120vac operation.
I still have a bass and guitar. In the early 90's I had a Plexiglass Fender P-bass. It had no tone but damn it looked cool. the only real problem was I couldn't play it nakedZippy wrote:I used to have a truly bulletproof guitar - the good ol' Dan Armstrong Plexiglas model. Heavy, toneless, transparent - everything you need in a guitar.selloutrr wrote:I'd think kevlar would be the most effective way to bullet proof an amplifier.Just saying it would work.
 
 Could you clarify that Chris?ChrisM wrote:Main's voltage doesn't matterStructo wrote:I've been looking around at various amps and their fusing schemes.
Marshalls use HT fuses a lot.
It seems that for 50w amps a 500ma HT fuse is the norm and in a 100w amp a 1 amp fuse is used.
This is for 120vac operation.
Fuse value will depend where it is located, what current the circuit is drawing and how much of a margin the fuse is designed for before it blows.
You are saying the same thing - that the fuse rating for the HT does not require knowledge of the mains voltage.Structo wrote:On the HT fuse it doesn't matter because the voltage there is the same regardless of the mains voltage.
Structo wrote:Could you clarify that Chris?ChrisM wrote:Main's voltage doesn't matterStructo wrote:I've been looking around at various amps and their fusing schemes.
Marshalls use HT fuses a lot.
It seems that for 50w amps a 500ma HT fuse is the norm and in a 100w amp a 1 amp fuse is used.
This is for 120vac operation.
Fuse value will depend where it is located, what current the circuit is drawing and how much of a margin the fuse is designed for before it blows.
Fuses have voltage ratings.
I realize that it is the current limit that determines when it blows but why do amps that have international power transformers in them have different specs for what fuse to use depending on what the mains voltages is?
When I look at amps there is one rating for 220vac and another for 120vac.
Basically the 220vac fuse is double the value of 120vac.
So say on a 100w amp powered by 120vac, the fuse is generally a 4 or 5 amp slo blo.
The same amp would have double that, so 8-10 amp slo blo.
For example, the Marshall 1923 amp states on the back panel that for 230vac operation it needs a 6 amp fuse.
For 120vac operation it needs a 3 amp fuse.
On the HT fuse it doesn't matter because the voltage there is the same regardless of the mains voltage.
Check it out
http://marshallamps.com/downloads/files ... %20Eng.pdf