Hey Gents,
I have an early 90's AC30TBX, one of the korg ones, made in GBR. As of late, when playing the amp, I will hear the volume slowly fade out randomly. After a while, maybe a few minutes, it will slowly fade back in and continue to work. I cant quite figure this one out. It only happens maybe once during a few hours of play. Does anyone know where to even begin with something like this?
Strange AC30 Problem
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
Re: Strange AC30 Problem
Those kind of problems can be difficult to trace.
Isn't that amp PCB ?
First of all rule out tubes by installing known working tubes.
If you don't have enough to retube it, substitute one tube at a time and turn on the amp as you go.
I think what I would do is inject a signal into each stage to try and find the offending area.
It could be a bad ground connection or even a bad tube for that matter.
I seem to recall that those amps get really hot and as they heat up stuff expands.
I would pull the chassis and look the circuit boards over carefully to see if any thing is loose or burnt looking.
Isn't that amp PCB ?
First of all rule out tubes by installing known working tubes.
If you don't have enough to retube it, substitute one tube at a time and turn on the amp as you go.
I think what I would do is inject a signal into each stage to try and find the offending area.
It could be a bad ground connection or even a bad tube for that matter.
I seem to recall that those amps get really hot and as they heat up stuff expands.
I would pull the chassis and look the circuit boards over carefully to see if any thing is loose or burnt looking.
Tom
Don't let that smoke out!
Don't let that smoke out!
Re: Strange AC30 Problem
i had a similar probem on a Vox, turned out to be effects loop, be worth checking if you have one
Re: Strange AC30 Problem
A slow fade out then back in sounds like a intermittant connection in the heater circuit.
Try reseating the tubes / heater fuses, and check pcb for dry joints.
Pete.
Try reseating the tubes / heater fuses, and check pcb for dry joints.
Pete.
Re: Strange AC30 Problem
Hey everyone, I will give your tips a try. Thanks!
For what it is worth, when the sound fades, the tone/overdrive characteristics do not change whatsoever. It sounds like someone is literally just pulling down a fader on a mixing console. Sounds completely different, the the sound you get as the caps bleed out when you turn off an amp and continue to play.
For what it is worth, when the sound fades, the tone/overdrive characteristics do not change whatsoever. It sounds like someone is literally just pulling down a fader on a mixing console. Sounds completely different, the the sound you get as the caps bleed out when you turn off an amp and continue to play.
Re: Strange AC30 Problem
That's consistent with an intermittant heater.