 . Also, of course, the cheap input jack to the first channel has broken. I'm going to replace the jack with a standard mono switching jack and call this fixed as well. This amp (luckily) is going to be an easy fix and easy money.
. Also, of course, the cheap input jack to the first channel has broken. I'm going to replace the jack with a standard mono switching jack and call this fixed as well. This amp (luckily) is going to be an easy fix and easy money.This brings me to my point. It seems a lot of guys flat out refuse to work on SS stuff which leaves a lot of work for me. I've been working with discrete stuff for a long time now so I usually know where to start looking and can troubleshoot the problem pretty quick. But, since most SS amps are an absolute beast to get inside (read: cheap Fenders!), I charge a little bit more than my standard bench fee for SS amps. I try to be fair and take into account the cost of the amp but I also have to be fair to myself. Another thing to consider is that aside from a few less cheap amps, most SS amps are single-sided PCB's which require you to pull a bunch of on-board connectors to pull up the board and unsolder stuff. This can take a lot of time to figure out with feature-rich amps!
FWIW it's not like I'm ripping anybody off either, the average price for my repairs is $40-60 depending on how much time I put into the amp and whether I do a "full service" (check bias and such). An expensive repair is $100 and that means I sank a lot of time into an amp. My low price keeps work coming back in the door and spending cash in my wallet.
I'm curious how guys/shops that deal with both tube and SS amplifier repair deal with the rates they charge. Do others charge more or less for SS stuff when compared with tube? Does it matter whether the tube amp is PCB or PTP?




 
  
  

