So, we have a Fishman Loudbox here in the shop we use for testing guitars and the like, and over the years the output has gradually fallen. A lot. Upon visual inspection, the only thing I found wrong was the three caps in the picture. C201 and C202 are stacked in parallel to the secondary of the power transformer, and C203 is bypassing the main reservoir cap on the +33V positive rail. So, those are obviously getting replaced, but the voltage on the rails is about right (+36V, with nothing going through the system and the mute switch on). That reservoir cap looks fine, but the esr appears to be drastically different from the negative rail (I don't have an ESR meter, but when measuring the resistance they wildly bounce around differently, so there is something different between them, which is enough to tell me something is wrong with one of them, and I'm going to pick the one that caused the bypass cap to scorch the PCB. Though the problem could be the bypass cap). At any rate, I'm replacing the electrolytic caps and the ceramic caps with over rated caps (100V instead of 50V), and hopefully that is the problem.
If the caps AREN'T the problem, any suggestions on where else to look? It is a active tri-amped system, with the highs and mids being class A opamps, and the bass using cascading BJT's in class AB (three BJT's per side). I'm a Fishman dealer, so I really can't share the schematic they sent me (though there is one out there on the Internet that someone else posted), but I'm assuming the problem has to be in the power amp or the power supply. And since it appears to be all three amps (high, mid, and low), I'm kind of assuming the power supply. What do you think?
Gabriel