So I read through the document, tested my guitar AC voltage then took measurements of the amp again with the guitar plugged in and strumming:sluckey wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 10:12 pmLook in your instruction document, specifically the (K-MOD102) TROUBLESHOOTING SUPPLEMENT, starting at page 5. Read and understand so the AC voltages at the test points will make sense. You must be strumming your guitar in order to put an ac signal into your amp. Only then will any AC measurements at those test points be meaningful. If you only have a cheap dmm you probably won't be able to get any meaningful readings.vipor3D wrote: ↑Wed May 17, 2023 9:30 pm I also rechecked the AC voltages with respect to ground based on the schematic:
-TP1: .85vac
-TP2: .02vac
-TP3: .01vac (highest value measured from full sweep of volume pot)
-TP4: .09vac
-TP5: .00vac
-TP6: .90vac
These values definitely seem off compared to the schematic, especially the measurement at TP5. I checked the measurement several times to make sure it wasn't an error on my part, but the meter kept going to 0.
None of the AC voltage readings at those test points will help you find the hum issue in your amp.
TP1: 0
TP2: 7.2 mVAC
TP3: 4.4 mVAC
TP4: 6.0 mVAC
TP5: 0
TP6: 4.0 mVAC
Something still seems off. Maybe the problem is with my meter. It's not an expensive one, but it's not one of the real cheap ones either. I'm using the AstroAi DM6000AR