Thursday, July 29, 2010

New Circuit Boards On The Way

Big news on several projects.

The big project for the last couple of months has been preparing the new Diesel Drive Buffer for production. This is the monster buffer project that I described previously. The original target price of $100 is now deemed hopeless, too many compromises would be necessary to get there. It would still be a better than typical product, but why do "better" when "awesome" is within reach. This does not use your usual twelve cent transistors or fifty cent ICs; it is all top shelf parts all the way. And this is an application that will reward the investment.

The order has been placed with the board house for prototypes of the new circuit board. They will be here in a couple of weeks and we'll get this thing off the breadboard and onto the pedalboard for some serious workouts. It's very hard to demonstrate a buffer pedal in a recording of video, but I've got a few ideas about how to show what this beast can do.

I am also revisiting a couple of classics. The Hero Overdrive and Electric Guru Treble Booster are also getting new circuit board designs. These boards will both speed production and produce a more reliable pedal. None of the existing pedals have had any circuit related failures, but these will just be that much more robust.

Thanks for checking in, I'll keep you posted on any new developments.

Hero Pedal with Down By Law - LIVE.


That last video was sweet. Now back to what we normally do around here. Rock out.





That was Sam with Down by Law in Brazil. Yeah, the video is a bit crude, but whaddya want, it still rocks.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Daily Diversion


I know little about Jewel or her music. But what I see in this video, I like. She's a good sport and that's a great crowd.

Saturday, July 17, 2010

More Dirt Removal


So, we've talked about preventing problems by exercising all the controls and jacks. We've turned all the knobs and flipped all the switches and run a plug in and out of all the jacks. So anything still not working right needs more than just exercise. Almost everything here applies to pedals and guitar electronics as well as to amps.

Mostly we're going to approach this from the point of view of solving a problem. You may not need to address everything discussed here. If you've got a noisy switch or a jack that hums when nothing is plugged in you might not want to do the whole amp, especially if it is otherwise clean and in good shape. But if you've got something that's been left in a shed or has a lot of obscure noises, get it all.

Let me introduce my favorite product in the world. Caig Deoxit D5.


You need a can of this. It isn't cheap, $12 - 18 for the size shown but it will last a long time and do a tremendous amount of good while it lasts. There are other worthwhile contact cleaners, but as long as I've been using this I haven't needed another. The one thing that does not work is WD40. Save that for cleaning bike parts and keeping your tools from rusting. WD40 leaves a lot of oil behind that dries into a hard and unpleasant varnish. If you use it on something you will need to use it again because of it. Then you'll need something else to flush out all the old WD40.

One other reason to use D5, it is completely benign to tolex, plastic, guitar finishes (even nitrocellulose lacquer) and, so far as I can tell, human beings. Don't drink the stuff, but I have gotten it in my eye and even that doesn't burn. Here's the MSDS.

So get your can of D5 and some tools if that is where this next phase takes us. Notice that the nozzle turns to adjust the spray, you'll want that at the lowest setting.

Tube Sockets and Grotty Tube Pins

For tube sockets, give a small small spray either directly at the socket or on the tube pins and run the tube in and out of the socket. Allow to dry before firing up the amp. Some tube pins tend to corrode in really ugly ways. The pins on small 9 pin tubes, like 12AX7s require some very fancy metallurgy. Because they go through the glass they have to expand and contract with heat in a way that is compatible with the glass. Normal metals won't do this, so corrosion resistant alloys are out of the question. Use a shot of Deoxit and a bit of 3M scotch brite to clean heavy corrosion. Sandpaper also works. Never use a file on a tube pin it, the vibrations will damage the tube.

We test for dirty pins by firing up the amp and listening while pushing the tube around a little in the socket. Start with the controls set low, no reason to blast yourself. If there's a problem it will be obvious. So, clean, let dry, power up and test. Just put a finger tip on the top of the tube and move it gently. If one cleaning does not do the job, repeat it.

Control Pots

We need access to the controls for this. It is rarely rewarding to try to clean a pot by spraying around the shaft and hoping the cleaner gets in. It's worth a try as a desperation move on a sealed pot, but not normally worth it. So open up the amp. All the normal safety warnings apply. Unplug and use a DC voltmeter to ensure that the voltages in the amp have drained. If you don't understand that, do not proceed.

With the amp open, look at the pot in the area where the terminals come out to be soldered to the wires or to the circuit board. Generally there will be window in the metal can around the terminals. Some pots will also have a hole in the case.



A short spray into either of these openings followed by exercising the pot will do the job. These do not get hot so you can feel free to test immediately. Do be sure the amp is correctly connected and safe before applying power. The usual rule is that a pot that does not operate cleanly after two cleaning attempts should be replaced. Do know that some controls will always be a little noisy, the "Presence" control on Marshalls is one example. Some pedals will also misbehave like that.

As a general rule any pot with DC current flowing through it will make noise. This can be an important diagnostic tool. If you find a pot that is noisy when turned that does not improve with cleaning and you notice that the noisy spots in the pots rotation never move when you spray or exercise it you likely have a DC voltage on that pot. This can help locate a leaky coupling capacitor or failing opamp.

Jacks

A quick spritz of Deoxit into the jack an running a plug in and out will solve most jack problems. Including dirt on the shorting leaf of the input jacks on an amp. This is the introductory course so we won't talk about the use of a burnishing tool for the ones that don't respond. Again, if repeated cleaning attempts fail, it is probably best to replace the jack.

Everything Else

In most modern amps you are going to find connectors like this:And this.


You'll find these push on connectors throughout many amps and almost always connecting speakers. It is good practice to clean them every few years, especially if you've got noise problems. Give the connector a short spray of D5 before removing it, this will make it a lot easier if there is any corrosion already there. Pull and push it back down a couple of times. On some amps, this could keep you busy awhile.

Be careful of any connectors that aren't indexed. Make sure everything goes back just as it was. Some multi-pin connectors will have a latch or catch on them. Don't just yank - look.

This is also where you will find if a connector has been poorly soldered. If the pin or post comes out of the circuit board, it isn't because you did something wrong, it is because it already had a problem.

Switches

I do not recommend cleaning a malfunctioning power or standby switch. Once those have gone the least bit bad, they arc and destroy the contacts in a way that no cleaner will fix. It may not hurt to clean a functional switch, but remember that Deoxit is flammable and we do not want any fires in the amp. You'll find that most such switches are sealed anyway.

Signal switches are another matter entirely. Find an opening. Sometimes the only path into the switch is straight along the actuator shaft, usually with a spring in your way. Even those often have a small cutout on the top. You'll see if you've gotten in there. It doesn't take much. One of the important things to know about Deoxit is that the less you use the better.

The Important Trick

Using heat from a lighter or other source you can soften the spray tube and bend it into a convenient shape. Don't melt it, and don't do this on the can. Let me emphasize that do not spray Deoxit near a heat source or flame. Bend the straw then mount it to the can. The bent straw will get in a lot more places than the straight one.

The Short Version
Find all the connections in the amp, give them a shot of Deoxit and move them through their range of motion. Let dry and add power.

Congratulations. You should now have a quieter, sweeter sounding amp.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

My Thought for the Day


Price Point Engineering is the art, the craft and the science that serves marketing by ensuring that no customer buying a product ever gets more than he paid for.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Dirt Sounds Like Dirt


Dirt sounds bad. It doesn't even sound good in a bad / good dirty way. So let's talk about how to get the crud out of your amp. I intend for this to be the first of a series of posts on things a player can do to understand, maintain and improve his own equipment. Not that I don't want the work, you can always just send it to me or one of my colleagues around the country. We're always happy to do this stuff. Even if you do just send it in, now you'll know what we're doing and why, and why we charge what we do for it.

What is this crap and where did it come from?

Open up any well used guitar or bass amp and you'll usually be greeted by something far dirtier than its external appearance and conditions of use would have you believe. The short answer is that large positive voltages attract crap from the air. Notice how quickly dust finds its way to your TV or computer monitor, like that but slower because of the lower voltages. It isn't uncommon to look in something like an Ampeg SVT and see a trail of filth on the circuit board that outlines the path of the copper traces on the other side of the board.

Fans (like in that SVT) are a part of that. Along with the cooling air, they blow in all the contaminants and dust in that air. Ever play a bar that served food? The airborne grease from the deep fryer has found its way onto and into your amp. If you can smell something, food, cigarette smoke, stage fog it can end up in your amp.

Crud and filth also get into an amp through more obvious methods. At the end of a show, what do you do? Unplug the guitar, wipe it down and put it away (you do wipe it down, right), then you go to the amp, turn it off and start wrapping your cords. While you're standing there winding your cable watch the plug drag across the stage picking up spilled beer, bassist sweat, punk singer spit and just plain crap tracked in from the parking lot when you loaded in. That filthy plug will go back into your guitar or amp the next time you play and it will foul the jacks. (Guinness will totally mess up a plug, that's experience talkin')

Oh, and metal just plain tarnishes when you leave it alone in Earth's atmosphere. There are metal on metal connections from one end of your amp to the other, switch and jack contacts, wipers on control pots, every sort of Faston, Molex and pin connector known to man. Unless they're all gold plated, and they're not, they will tarnish or corrode. Oh, even the gold ones pick up crud same as everything else.

So what's so bad about this crud?

Some of this crud acts as an insulator that prevents signal from passing; some forms of crud, especially some of the corrosion found on contacts acts as a semiconductor. I've seen tarnished FX loop jacks that acted like a diode distortion circuit. How does that happen? Many jacks in guitar amps do more than just connect to the cable that you plug in. The input jacks almost always have some sort of switching contact that shorts the input to ground when nothing is plugged in. This is to quiet the amp when you aren't using it. When that shorting contact gets dirty the amp will tend to buzz or pick up radio stations when nothing is plugged into it. That wouldn't be so bad on an amp with only one input jack, but most amps have more and we don't use them all. So the unused jack is sitting there introducing noise and static while you're playing into the other.

Some amps have an FX loop or a set of jacks labeled "preamp out" "power amp in." Those are called looping jacks and have a set of switch contacts built in that bypass the jack when nothing is plugged in. When those tarnish or get dirty, the amp cuts out or distorts in really bad ways. If you have an amp that is cutting out that has any sort of looping jack the first thing to test is to plug a short cable between the in/out or send/return jacks and see if that fixes the symptom. Practice amps that have a "Headphone" jack can also suffer from this type of problem since the headphone jack is usually designed to kill the signal to the speaker.

What can I do about it?

There are two answers, one is preventative the other remedial. The most important preventative is exercise, that is use all of the jacks and controls on your amp. The guys who design the components are pretty smart and most switching contacts are what is called "self-wiping" which leaving out all potty references means they rub against one another when you use them abrading away tarnish and crud. At least once or twice a year make sure to exercise every switch, knob, control and jack. With the power off, flip every switch back and forth about ten times, especially the ones you never use. You shouldn't need to worry about the power and standby switches, but all those channels and stuff you don't use, exercise those switches. Turn every control pot back and forth about ten times, especially the ones you haven't touched since you got it. For those you can have the amp powered up with the master volume set sorta low and listen to see if they're noisy and if they clean up. For the jacks, again more exercise, run a plug in and out of each one about ten times. Don't feel awkward if you get a little excited doing this, it's only natural. And I do mean every jack, speaker jacks (with the power off, of course) FX loops, footswitch jacks, all of them. Again pay special attention to the ones you never use or just leave plugged in all the time, like the speaker jack in a combo amp.

The same thing applies to tube sockets. Partially pull each tube and push it back in two or three or four times. Careful with the big ones, you don't want to break the index pin, so be gentle. Just partially pull and re-insert each one.

For something like a mixing console this could take awhile. But if you don't do it, you will pay someone else to do it and that someone will charge between $50 and $125 an hour. Your call. This will prevent most of the problems that repair techs see in older equipment.

Summary.

Keeping your amp in clean, dry air helps. But that isn't where most of the gigs are. Wipe down the plugs on your cables before or after using them.

Exercising all of the jacks, pots, switches, every control on the front and back panel will prevent problems. Idleness does more harm than wear, so at least once a year run everything through its paces.

I'll be back next time with how to cure the problems that exercise alone doesn't fix.