Hey Y’all!
Long time lurker, first time poster here. Just wanted to first say thanks for all the great knowledge on this site; it’s been endlessly helpful for my learning process and inspiration!
I’m currently repairing my friend’s Musicman HD-130 head and am running into trouble with some red plating tubes. I don’t see tube number designations in the schematic, so I will refer to them like this (from left to right, looking at the back of the amp):
v1: 12ax7 driver/phase inverter
v2/v3: first el34 pair
v4/v5: second el34 pair
Here’s a link to the schematic:
http://el34world.com/charts/Schematics/files/Musicman/Musicman_2475_130_2275_130.pdfIt’s the last page in the pdf, with the tube PI.
I was told that the amp was plugged into the wrong cab and it blew one of the EL-34s while they were playing it. I tested all the output tubes on my old Seco tube tester (apparently from a local grocery store), which isn’t very accurate but can tell me if things are completely not good. Three of the tubes tested fine and one (v5) was indeed dead. The dead tube had some burns on its socket (only on the bottom side where the tube gets put in) as well, between the plate and the screen grid pins.
First thing I did was replace all the electrolytics. They were all original, and a complete recap has helped me before with these amps. I also replaced the burned tube socket and the 10 ohm cathode resistors just in case.
I’ve seen these musicman amps blow output tubes before and have heard that they can sometimes take the output transformer with them. So:
- I measured resistance between the two primary leads going to the plates and found that it was open.
- I then measured resistance between the blue lead going to the plates of the first pair of EL-34s (v2/v3) and the center tap and it was open.
- Then I measured resistance between the brown lead going to the second pair (v4/v5) and the center tap and I got 113 ohms.
I opened up the transformer and found the break in the wire connecting to the blue lead. There was enough slack that I carefully wrapped the two ends together and quickly soldered them. I measured for resistance and got 105 ohms from blue lead to center tap and 216 ohms from blue to brown. Occasionally, my meter would have a hard time reading and I would need to switch into diode mode and then back to resistance for the number to stop jumping around. Does this indicate anything in itself? My meter is a fluke 77/an.
I used some silicone to cover up the bare transformer winding wires and put it back together with the paper covering that was inside the bell cover. I tested it again before installing into the amp and got the same resistance readings. Installed it back into the amp, and still got the same readings.
Powered it up without tubes to make sure I was getting correct voltages. Plates were all showing around 725, screens at 375, and the grids were all getting negative bias voltage. I turned the bias pot to max negative bias position, powered down, and installed a new set of matched JJ E34L tubes.
I biased them with the recommended method (measuring .5v across one of the 10ohm cathode resistors), but kept them at .45 volts to hopefully be a little bit safer. So, 725v on the plates, .45 volts across the cathode resistor which measured about 5.6ohms with the amp off (it’s two 10 ohms in parallel). Assuming they’re sharing that load equally, that’s about 14w Plate dissipation per tube, no?
Figured I was in a good safe zone. I let the amp sit and watched the voltage across the cathode resistor. Everything was stable after 30 mins so I decided to play some guitar through it. Performed well and sounded great at low volumes for another 30 minutes. Master volume all the way up, everything worked well until about 4 on the vibrato channel. I hit a big chord, the voltage across the cathode grew to 3v, and (just) the second pair of E34Ls started red plating. I turned the amp off quickly.
The amp still idles just fine and all voltages look good at idle. I’m not exactly sure how to proceed at this point. I’m concerned that I may have fixed the connection in the output transformer but perhaps it’s not strong enough to handle the amp when turned up. I’d love to not have to replace the output transformer if possible!
Any advice on where to go from here?