Vibrolux Reverb Reissue died
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Vibrolux Reverb Reissue died
I borrowed a friends Vibrolux reissue to bring to the studio today. Had it on while playing for 2 hours. Then I turned it off for about 40 minutes. I then tried to turn it on. No light. Are you FUCKIN KIDDIN? Ruined the second half of the studio time, and I have a non working amp to give back to my friend. Yes, I checked the fuse and it is visibly fine. It is a 3a, I tired subsituting my 2a bassman fuse in to see if I could get any sort of reaction. None. When you turn it on the lamp does not light up, no sound form the speaker, but you can hear a small electric noise from the insides as if the tubes are warming up (which I don't think they are...). What could it be besides the fuse?
Here ya go bro
http://www.geofex.com/ampdbug/ampdebug.htm
Try replacing it with a correct fuse. I have a few taped inside my bassma chasis just in case - its a simple cheap fix to what can potetially ruin a gig/recording session.
If it is the fuse, then smething caused it to blow and needs checked out.
http://www.geofex.com/ampdbug/ampdebug.htm
Try replacing it with a correct fuse. I have a few taped inside my bassma chasis just in case - its a simple cheap fix to what can potetially ruin a gig/recording session.
If it is the fuse, then smething caused it to blow and needs checked out.
Ah, the ol' "let a friend borrow an amp with an intermittent problem and hope that it dies in his possession so he and his guilt will sort it out for me" trick. That's a classic.
If truly nothing is happening, it could be as simple as a dirty switch. With the amp unplugged, perhaps try flipping the switch on and off a few times while gently wiggling it, then plug the amp back in and give it a whirl. This was actually the same failure mode for my amp once upon a time, and it was just the switch -- so as stupid as it sounds, it's easy enough to try.
If truly nothing is happening, it could be as simple as a dirty switch. With the amp unplugged, perhaps try flipping the switch on and off a few times while gently wiggling it, then plug the amp back in and give it a whirl. This was actually the same failure mode for my amp once upon a time, and it was just the switch -- so as stupid as it sounds, it's easy enough to try.
This happened to my ac30... I think, it magically repaired itself either way?avj wrote:If truly nothing is happening, it could be as simple as a dirty switch. With the amp unplugged, perhaps try flipping the switch on and off a few times while gently wiggling it, then plug the amp back in and give it a whirl. This was actually the same failure mode for my amp once upon a time, and it was just the switch -- so as stupid as it sounds, it's easy enough to try.
- laterallateral
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cobascis wrote:you can hear a small electric noise from the insides as if the tubes are warming up
My YBA similarly crapped out on me, on stage. Mine does not have a fuse but a circuit breaker.Haze wrote:If it is the fuse, then smething caused it to blow and needs checked out.
It would actually power on but every time I took it off of standby, the circuit breaker would trip. (in a disturbingly audible fashion)
I spent a lot of time trying to figure out what was happening, checked for char marks, arcing, nasty looking solder joints... considered taking it to a tech out of despair. Until I had the brilliant idea of taking the chassis out of the case and flipping it upside down.
Basically, it looked as though somebody had lost the tip of a TRS jack in there a long time ago. It must have gotten dislodged from wherever it was on the bumpy van ride to the venue and had rolled under the turret board, shorting out some joints.
I'm not betting something like is is the source of your problem but I'd say it might be worth checking.
Maybe a wad of solder, a washer, burr, some kind of metallic detritus is messing with your shit?
Just a thought.
Last edited by laterallateral on Fri Sep 19, 2014 3:05 pm; edited 115,726 times in total
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+1avj wrote:Ah, the ol' "let a friend borrow an amp with an intermittent problem and hope that it dies in his possession so he and his guilt will sort it out for me" trick. That's a classic.
If truly nothing is happening, it could be as simple as a dirty switch. With the amp unplugged, perhaps try flipping the switch on and off a few times while gently wiggling it, then plug the amp back in and give it a whirl. This was actually the same failure mode for my amp once upon a time, and it was just the switch -- so as stupid as it sounds, it's easy enough to try.
The switch on my Champ is old and shite and blew a fuse on the amp. Now I leave the switch on and flip it on and off via the stepdown transformer on switch