Deluxe Reverb 65RI help
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Deluxe Reverb 65RI help
It powers on, all tubes glow, but no sound.
I get the usual hum/pop when I plug the cable into the guitar.
If I turn the amp volume up really high (on either channel) I do hear some faint/muffled/distorted guitar sound.
Any ideas? I never play with the volume higher than 2 or 3, and the amp hasn't been transported anywhere for over a year.
I get the usual hum/pop when I plug the cable into the guitar.
If I turn the amp volume up really high (on either channel) I do hear some faint/muffled/distorted guitar sound.
Any ideas? I never play with the volume higher than 2 or 3, and the amp hasn't been transported anywhere for over a year.
Last edited by Noisy Cat on Mon Jun 14, 2021 11:20 am, edited 1 time in total.
If that was the case, wouldn't the Normal channel be OK though?Nick wrote:When I’ve had similar issues with Fender amps it usually turns out to be the reverb tank or cables to said reverb tank
Not sure if that’s the culprit here though
That said, I'm not getting the usual springy sound when the amp is rocked/tilted. The cables to/from the tank seem OK though...
I'm guessing you have tried other guitars and leads first.
Try pulling all the tubes and cleaning all contacts as well as you can with some electrical contact cleaner before refitting them. Check the jack socket hasn't bent a little bit and is giving a good connection. I'd try retubing before taking to a tech, then if the new tubes don't work at least the tech has a new set to fit for when the amp is repaired.
Try pulling all the tubes and cleaning all contacts as well as you can with some electrical contact cleaner before refitting them. Check the jack socket hasn't bent a little bit and is giving a good connection. I'd try retubing before taking to a tech, then if the new tubes don't work at least the tech has a new set to fit for when the amp is repaired.
It's definitely the amp, not the guitar or cables. All the tubes are properly seated and glowing. I don't really want to replace them if there's nothing wrong. The issue is present when plugged into any of the four jack sockets, so it's not that.GreenKnee wrote:I'm guessing you have tried other guitars and leads first.
Try pulling all the tubes and cleaning all contacts as well as you can with some electrical contact cleaner before refitting them. Check the jack socket hasn't bent a little bit and is giving a good connection. I'd try retubing before taking to a tech, then if the new tubes don't work at least the tech has a new set to fit for when the amp is repaired.
Anyone recommend any London amp repairers? Preferably east side.
100% do this, and having a spare set of tubes is a must, regardless; this way, you can troubleshoot what's going on without getting a tech involved now, and in the worst case, just have spares for when a tube invariably shits the bed.GreenKnee wrote: Try pulling all the tubes and cleaning all contacts as well as you can with some electrical contact cleaner before refitting them. Check the jack socket hasn't bent a little bit and is giving a good connection. I'd try retubing before taking to a tech, then if the new tubes don't work at least the tech has a new set to fit for when the amp is repaired.
Tubes can still have "gone bad" while still maintaining their glow, so I wouldn't consider that a metric of them being fully functional.
Ah OK, thank you. I know next to nothing when it comes to amps. I don't gig, so have no need for emergency parts on standby. I'd assumed glowing meant good. Should I replace just the smaller preamp ones or the power ones too?Doog wrote:100% do this, and having a spare set of tubes is a must, regardless; this way, you can troubleshoot what's going on without getting a tech involved now, and in the worst case, just have spares for when a tube invariably shits the bed.GreenKnee wrote: Try pulling all the tubes and cleaning all contacts as well as you can with some electrical contact cleaner before refitting them. Check the jack socket hasn't bent a little bit and is giving a good connection. I'd try retubing before taking to a tech, then if the new tubes don't work at least the tech has a new set to fit for when the amp is repaired.
Tubes can still have "gone bad" while still maintaining their glow, so I wouldn't consider that a metric of "they're all fine"
If you're non-amp savvy, I'd really suggest watching a few videos on Youtube about servicing tube amps; potentially lethal voltages in there, Knowing Is Half The Battle, etc.
[youtube][/youtube]
Lovely background music, top level stuff though. Changing the tubes on most amps is fairly straightforward (not requiring taking off any scary back panels etc.), but I've no experience with your model, so let's both watch the above video! - (looks to be easy and safe enough here)
Your amp has a lot of tubes, (6 preamp tubes of 2 types, a rectifier tube, 2 power tubes) so it makes everything a bit more tricky to diagnose:
http://www.amplifiedparts.com/sets-by- ... rb-reissue
http://www.ampvalves.co.uk/product-cat ... xe-reverb/
When you crank the volume to hear said faint guitar signal, do you also get the usual background noise you get from turning your amp up? If so, I'd wager that it's one/more of your preamp tubes.
Your amp has four 12AX7s and two 12AT7 in the preamp. Those models are interchangeable, just that the 12AT7s are lower gain and placed in a specific spots in the circuit for THOSE FENDER VIBES.
If you want to do this on the cheap, you could buy a single 12AX7 (or 12AT7), sub it into each position to see if you can locate a shitty one in your current set. This would be the first thing I'd do tbh.
[youtube][/youtube]
Lovely background music, top level stuff though. Changing the tubes on most amps is fairly straightforward (not requiring taking off any scary back panels etc.), but I've no experience with your model, so let's both watch the above video! - (looks to be easy and safe enough here)
Your amp has a lot of tubes, (6 preamp tubes of 2 types, a rectifier tube, 2 power tubes) so it makes everything a bit more tricky to diagnose:
http://www.amplifiedparts.com/sets-by- ... rb-reissue
http://www.ampvalves.co.uk/product-cat ... xe-reverb/
When you crank the volume to hear said faint guitar signal, do you also get the usual background noise you get from turning your amp up? If so, I'd wager that it's one/more of your preamp tubes.
Your amp has four 12AX7s and two 12AT7 in the preamp. Those models are interchangeable, just that the 12AT7s are lower gain and placed in a specific spots in the circuit for THOSE FENDER VIBES.
If you want to do this on the cheap, you could buy a single 12AX7 (or 12AT7), sub it into each position to see if you can locate a shitty one in your current set. This would be the first thing I'd do tbh.
Last edited by Doog on Tue Jun 15, 2021 3:13 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Deluxe Reverb 65RI help
The first valve that's common to both channels is the phase inverter, V6. You could try pulling out the reverb tank driver V3 or the vibrato oscillator valve V5 and swapping that into the V6 position. Caveat; I'm assuming the RI uses the same valve numbering as the original.Noisy Cat wrote:If I turn the amp volume up really high (on either channel) I do hear some faint/muffled/distorted guitar sound.
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