I have an old hammond amp that I am converting for guitar, the amp worked before but now I only get sound for maybe a second after it warms up then the sound fades out to nothing. If I turn it off for a second then turn it back on I get another second or so of sound then nothing, any ideas?
I'm assuming that when you say it "worked before", that you were getting guitar sounds and the amp worked properly. If that is the case, check your preamp tubes one by one. Try swapping them until the problem goes away. It sounds like one could have a bad heater.
Look for missing or open-circuit grid leak resistors. 'It works for a few seconds' is a classic symptom of this problem. Every valve grid must get a DC supply from somewhere.

Every valve grid must get a DC supply from somewhere.

No, you still need a grid resistor even if it is quite a high value (e.g. 10M). The reason is that if for some reason the grid happens to acquire a high potential then secondary emission could push it even higher. A grid resistor helps counteract this.

I said secondary emission. The higher the positive charge on the grid the greater will be secondary emission as electrons will strike with greater momentum so more likely to cause secondary emission. A grid can be coated to suppress secondary emission, of course, but keeping its voltage low will always help.
- Status
- Not open for further replies.
- Home
- Live Sound
- Instruments and Amps
- homebrew 18 watt problem