I don't know
None of it makes sense to me
I would assume a lot of the not making sense may be the verbiage I used to post the questions and findings, in conjunction with me checking voltages incorrectly at some areas of the amp. I apologize for misconceptions and my inexperience.
1. Here are the specifics on this thread. Before this thread of posts;
• The amp was almost always dead quiet hot switch off. And had no more background noise than any of my older Marshall or Fender amps with the hot switch on. It always accepted pedals with no issues except for a few older ones that do not have true bypass which I do not use with this amp (I basically only use a chorus, reverb and delay with this head). I usually do not use any gain pedals with the amp but if I do chain in a distortion pedal it is never with the hot switch on, so they were basically passive hot switch on.
• About a month ago it started to not accepting pedals at all. It didn’t matter what type tuner, modulation, distortion, ect… and would create a constant background noise as soon as the stand by switch was switched on, and a pedal was in line to the amp hot switch on or off. But the amp was fine with just using the guitar and no pedals.
• When I started this post of course I had all kinds of questions about cords, pedals, outlets in the house, ect… I tested everything and it was none of the above as I use 6 different amps in this room with the same cords, pedals, ect…
• I switched pre amp & power tubes with a known good set from another working amp in the same arrangement as the amp they came out of in the 2034 and vise versa put the pre amp & power tubes from the 2034 in the Marshall and it worked just fine. So I concluded it was not the pre amp or power tubes.
• In my inexperience I decided to lift the board to check voltages because the layout in the library did not match this amp. In the process of doing this 2 wires became detached from the board (wiper of the master and ground of the volume). I reattached these and the problem went away???? Cant explain why.
• 3 uses later the same thing happens again it will not accept pedals but is fine with just the guitar alone. Then I started checking everything. I also did trace out everything and found the discrepancies between what I have and the schematic.
• Then again in my inexperience I was sitting to close to the amp on the bench with the guitar after I replaced the NFB resistor, and posted that the problem became worse causing more background noise & hum. This was figured out by accident as posted above. The post prior to finding out I was too close to the amp was most likely miss leading.
2. Components replaced;
• FB resistor because it measured 4.2k across it and the schematic and banding on the resistor called for 47k. Only to find out that the new one reads the same installed on the board and the old one reads 47k out of the amp. As crazy as it sounds the change of the resistor did help a little bit in my opinion. Especially with the presence turned way up.
• The input jack was replaced after I figured out I was too close to the amp as I purchased a new one and it was a cheap easy item to replace. And because it was in the input circuit. It also had a small impact on decreasing the background noise, again in my opinion.
• I did replace the tubes with a new set I was saving for the next build because they were the original tubes from the early to mid 90’s and I have no idea how many hours are on this amp.
• The amp is quieter now, but not as quiet as it was prior to the 1st instance of this happening. Which is the frustrating part because I know what it could be like?
3. Specific questions
• Can someone please explain the negative feed back resistor to me? Should it read like that or should it read 47k across the resistor on the board? Or could this be a potential problem also?
• Should the mv reading across the 1 ohm resistor be the same reading as you would get with the bias probes if I had a meter I could zero out?
• I know this is suggestive but could I have a bad Cap, or one that is going bad intermittently right now that will fail later? They are the original ones installed back in the early to mid 90’s. I had a problem with a re-issue twin once that caused some crazy stuff to happen that I could not find until the cap finally failed.
• Could the hot switch check out ok on the meter but have an issue internally causing this type of symptom?
Any other suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Again I apologize for my inexperience with the technical side of amp building and repair which leads to miss guided questions. Some day I will be able to contribute to this board rather than being a sponge.
Steve