I just picked up a Fender Deluxe VM. It's a great amp but mine had a problem which I thought I would share just in case you run into one of these.
In my case, the overdrive channel occasionally became very noisy and the gain would drop out. It would still make a lot of noise even with the volume controls turned down completely. Tapping on the unit would make the noise change. Something was intermittent.
The clean channel made no noise. It worked perfectly.
I decided to isolate the circuit causing the noise as much as I could. I discovered that, if I plugged into the "Return" jack, the noise went away. So, I had the noise problem isolated to a small area of the circuit -- somewhere between the overdrive volume control and the "Return" jack.
I opened the unit and probed around. I found an IC U4 sensitive to pressure. Sure enough, this IC was in the circuit that I had already narrowed down. A close inspection revealed bad solder joints on the IC. It appears that there wasn't even a pad for one of the pins. I'm not sure if that was supposed to be like that or not. You could see that the solder on the adjacent pin had not flowed properly.
I reflowed the solder joints and now the amp works perfectly.
Here is a look at the circuit board prior to repair.
In my case, the overdrive channel occasionally became very noisy and the gain would drop out. It would still make a lot of noise even with the volume controls turned down completely. Tapping on the unit would make the noise change. Something was intermittent.
The clean channel made no noise. It worked perfectly.
I decided to isolate the circuit causing the noise as much as I could. I discovered that, if I plugged into the "Return" jack, the noise went away. So, I had the noise problem isolated to a small area of the circuit -- somewhere between the overdrive volume control and the "Return" jack.
I opened the unit and probed around. I found an IC U4 sensitive to pressure. Sure enough, this IC was in the circuit that I had already narrowed down. A close inspection revealed bad solder joints on the IC. It appears that there wasn't even a pad for one of the pins. I'm not sure if that was supposed to be like that or not. You could see that the solder on the adjacent pin had not flowed properly.
I reflowed the solder joints and now the amp works perfectly.
Here is a look at the circuit board prior to repair.
Attachments
Some of those resistors look a bit suspect too - the ones to the left have an indentation around where the lead sits in the joint!
Bad day at the factory! lol. Listen to bigwill if you got it apart reflow as many joints as possible because you might not be able to see a cold solder joint. It be fine now but with time, heat, and vibration you can bet on another failing. I have pulled my hair out trying to fix noise problems because of faulty connections/pcb boards.
And if it is recent production, they will have used the darned lead-free solder, which doesn;t make as reliable a joint either.
All it takes is a little contamination, and the solder won't wet well. Those parts are not soldered by hand.
All it takes is a little contamination, and the solder won't wet well. Those parts are not soldered by hand.
Fender Deluxe VM
I had the same noise issues with my Fender Deluxe VM. I tried re-flowing the power tube solder joints but that didn't seem to solve the problem. The solder joints on IC U4 looked OK with the exception of one pin. I re-flowed all of them and now it appears that the problem is gone. I will keep my fingers crossed!
I had the same noise issues with my Fender Deluxe VM. I tried re-flowing the power tube solder joints but that didn't seem to solve the problem. The solder joints on IC U4 looked OK with the exception of one pin. I re-flowed all of them and now it appears that the problem is gone. I will keep my fingers crossed!
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