Going back to what you said in a previous post, Since the amp buzzes unless you touch something metal, that is usually a sign of a ground connection not being made properly. Had an issue with an output transformer not having a secondary ground a few weeks back and the amp hummed loudly unless you touched the chassis or metal on the guitar.
The input jack is a shorting jack, which means it shorts its self to ground when you pull the guitar cable out. So if the buzz stops when you pull out the cable or touch metal, it gives the signal a path to bleed off to ground.
I would check all of the inputs and speaker jacks to make sure all the solder joints are not broken or compromised. A failing connection can cause some noise, but it is usually a crackle type noise, though bad grounds hum, and hum badly sometimes.
I had a JFET go out in a Crate Stealth I have and it caused the clean channel not to work as it shunted all the signal to ground through the broken JFET. Narrowing your issue down may not be easy without a signal probe or oscilloscope, as with the issue I had with the Stealth, when checked with a signal probe, the signal was fine all the way through the circuit until it left the master volume. The JFET was trashed and instead of switching the clean channel back into the circuit path, it shunted it to ground instead. It even made the Master volume control appear to work backwards for the clean channel.
I have an old BV120H circuit board to look at, but there are a ton of components between where your signal is clean and where it is humming. The easiest way to figure out what is wrong would be to pinpoint where exactly the buzz is coming from. If we know what part of the circuit then we can more accurately diagnose the cause.
Have you cleaned all of the jacks and potentiometers?
Given any though to building an audio signal probe?
Here's a link to a video of a person demonstrating how one is used to find a problem in an old tube radio.
The input jack is a shorting jack, which means it shorts its self to ground when you pull the guitar cable out. So if the buzz stops when you pull out the cable or touch metal, it gives the signal a path to bleed off to ground.
I would check all of the inputs and speaker jacks to make sure all the solder joints are not broken or compromised. A failing connection can cause some noise, but it is usually a crackle type noise, though bad grounds hum, and hum badly sometimes.
I had a JFET go out in a Crate Stealth I have and it caused the clean channel not to work as it shunted all the signal to ground through the broken JFET. Narrowing your issue down may not be easy without a signal probe or oscilloscope, as with the issue I had with the Stealth, when checked with a signal probe, the signal was fine all the way through the circuit until it left the master volume. The JFET was trashed and instead of switching the clean channel back into the circuit path, it shunted it to ground instead. It even made the Master volume control appear to work backwards for the clean channel.
I have an old BV120H circuit board to look at, but there are a ton of components between where your signal is clean and where it is humming. The easiest way to figure out what is wrong would be to pinpoint where exactly the buzz is coming from. If we know what part of the circuit then we can more accurately diagnose the cause.
Have you cleaned all of the jacks and potentiometers?
Given any though to building an audio signal probe?
Here's a link to a video of a person demonstrating how one is used to find a problem in an old tube radio.
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