Hi,
Does the amp have a line out or pre-amp in? You can possibly
break it down even further. For instance if you can use your
borrowed amp, (if it has a line out or power amp in) run out of
the known good pre amp out to power amp in of your traynor. OR
the preamp out of the traynor to power amp in of your good
borrowed amp.
Will tell you where the problem is in the amp. We are talking transistor power amp right?
Might be worth getting fixed but the job is probably over your head. I think there are people looking for the amp.
Gary
Gary,
Re: Bass guitar amp head and speaker cabinet put out a distorted sound…
I tried another amp head and the speakers sound beautiful. So now
I need to
find out how to repair the old Traynor Mono Block-B. Or does it
become a boat
anchor?
I wish I knew how to describe the sound it makes. Sort of fuzzy.
It’s almost
like the effects some guitarists like to create in rock music.
Now that I know the problem is in the amp head, what shall I do?
Thanks,
Pat
Hi Pat,
First thing you gotta do is run the head to known good cabinet or another head to these pv speakers.
Tell you in a second where the problem is, let me know your findings…
Even if you have to borrow gear, don’t take anything apart till you perform these tests.
Gary
I hope that you have some words of wisdom to share with me on
this problem. I
play a bass guitar and just purchased some used gear. I tested
out the
equipment in the basement of the seller and at first the speakers
sounded
distorted. The seller played with the controls and mimized the
distortion to a
point where it was negligible. So I bought it.
First, the gear: Peavey 1810 bass cabinet with an 18-inch and two
10-inch
speakers (200 watts, 400 ohms).
Traynor Mono Block-B (I am told it is 200 watts into 400 ohms)
The amp
controls include an input volume and an output volume
control.
Both items are of 1970s vintage.
Now the symptom: I have tried 2 different basses: a Fender with
passive pickup
and an Ibanez with active pickup and both create an annoying
distortion,
almost as though the speakers are blown. At first I suspected
that the two
10-inch speakers were making the distorted sound because this is
where the
distortion seemed most apparent when I put my ear to the grill of
the cabinet.
However, I have been able to minimize the distortion
inconsistently by working
the two volume controls and the low/middle/high controls. Seems
to me that a
blown speaker might sound distorted with consistency. So I am now
suspecting
that the amp is the culprit. This distortion is apparent at any
frequency (all
notes).
This distortion is less apparent at the beginning of a plucked
note and very
apparent as the note is sustained and diminishes.
Is there a way that I can test and confirm that the amp is where
I need to
focus my attention?Should I try a pot cleaner? If so, can you
give me advice
on how to use it?
Thank you for your time!
Pat
Hello,
First congrats on the amp,,don’t ever sell it, unless it’s to me :)
You can try the preamp and vibrato tubes…..just switch with the other tubes..but notice that the tube next to the reverb transformer is a 12at7..switch that with the drive tube..look at the tube chart in the cab or find one to look at
Just make note of what you’re doing before you do it…
also if you mean the vibrato is intermittent when you hit the switch..or turn the knob?
If it’s not the above you have problems
No it doesn’t hurt on those settings other than what you stated…you have to crank them to get the tone…
Gary
Gary,
I have a 1966 Fender Vibrolux. The vibrato is unreliable and the reverb channel has a fuzzy sound to it at higher volumes. The normal channel is fine. I switched the power tubes and it makes no difference. Perhaps there’s a foul preamp tube?
Does it harm the amp playing it loud (other than wearing out tubes faster and stressing speakers?). I play it at 5 most of the time and will turn it up to 7.
Any suggestions?
Regards,
Barrie