My 3B is giving me grief .The the output seems to fade in and out then gets really muddy.I have changed the 9v twice(yes, they were brand new) and figured it was my amp head.Anyone had the same issues?
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Bad preamp?
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Interesting. Can you test the battery with a multimeter to make sure you're getting 9V? The symptoms definitely sound like a bad battery...it's possible you just had two bad ones in a row. Also, I'd check the wiring to make sure everything is solid. It's possible one of the solder joints has gone bad.
I highly doubt it's the actual preamp circuit.Scott
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that's weird I never had a pre go bad except for the pot soldered on the board and it starts by getting scratchy when you turn it..
I know mine all do the same thing, but not till the battery gets to around 6 or so volts, then the pre goes whacky before it dies totally.
there's also bad pots or switch, but they usually indicate that by the scratchiness that you can hear with the turning of the knobs.
Chowederboots has a spare preamp still IIRC. if it is really going bad you can PM him and snag it off him for cheap...
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not that this may have anything to do with your issue SOB, but the jack contacts have to make/break for battery voltage, and if that contact is dirty/corroded whatever, you may not be getting 100% voltage from the battery into the preamp...plug a cord in when you change the battery and read the voltage AT the pre not just from the battery.
just another thought :idea:
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Originally posted by amimbari View Postnot that this may have anything to do with your issue SOB, but the jack contacts have to make/break for battery voltage, and if that contact is dirty/corroded whatever, you may not be getting 100% voltage from the battery into the preamp...plug a cord in when you change the battery and read the voltage AT the pre not just from the battery.
just another thought :idea:"Your work is ingenius…it’s quality work….and there are simply too many notes…that’s all, just cut a few, and it’ll be perfect."
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Originally posted by MetalMedal II View PostIf it's the original jack, it could very well be the culprit. They were made of a square plastic housing that easily disintegrates with time and can short out the output. Change it for a switchcraft stereo jack.
and yes he means this type of jack, and I have replaced a couple myself, but none on the ones I have.
.Last edited by amimbari; 01-27-2010, 08:16 PM.
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