I like your "thinking out loud" approach to these videos. You are getting close to 30K subscribers! I was with you at the 5K level or possibly before that. I'm glad my 70's Deluxe Reverb is hand wired. Even someone like me was able to recap it, replace bad resistors and even correct a couple of wiring errors a previous "tech" did on it.
I’m always amazed at your ability and diligence to not just make the amps work, but improve their performance. Thank you for sharing your knowledge Sir.
I'm here from the Tone-Talk Q&A ! Enjoyed that interview and looking forward to this channel... I'm not a tech or even handy though I took some E&M physics 100 years ago... hoping this channel might fire some synapses of yore
I really don’t understand much of what you’re saying like micro farit this and flux capacitor that, which I’m sure I spelled wrong! Nevertheless, I cannot stop watching you work in all these vids and listen to you explain things…you truly are a master at your craft! If my DRRI ever craps out I think it’ll be worth every penny to send it across country for you to work your magic👍 GREAT CHANNEL
1 i really appreciate all your videos, 2 i hear you say a lot "Leo would have fired x" I like to think Leo or whoever would have looked at poor work and then trained the person to do it well
Great video thanks Lyle! That 220uF turned into a half a none-o-farad capacitor! Dreadful luck its resistor went open circuit! Do'h! As so often happens, the 'protection' circuit goes faulty.
Boy, I wish ----- many engineers and designers seem to take the most convoluted path imaginable to arrive at a solution to a relatively simple problem. Sometimes they apparently want to demonstrate how clever they are. My personal experience is that morons are impressed or awed by complexity but a genius recognizes and appreciates simplicity.
Lyle, I love your videos and learn so much from watching them. You have a great eye for the small details and customer service. I've noticed that you don't do any 57 Deluxe Reissue Tweed amps. Wouldn't those amps also benefit from upgraded Caps and components?
Great demo . Do see you point that the need for ESR cap test is not need when you know it a bad cap. ESR testing is good for the less well experienced tech. So the 18k resistor is to voice the bass tone circuit in a way not wanted by the player . Bell and Whistles for no good use . It not bragging when you deliver . So 45 years ago heard a very good surgeon say in front of me it what I know not what I have to do that your are paying for . You can have cheap , right , or fast but you only get 2 of 3 you choose.
Thanks. ESR testing can be critical in circuits dealing in MHz frequencies or where temperature changes can cause big issues. As you know - I’m just explaining for the peanut gallery. In this case I knew it was a bad filter stage, and given how bad the stock caps are I knew I would be changing them all out. Normally I don’t bother measuring a bad cap but figured someone might like to see it.
@@PsionicAudio In the hi-fi end it is of interest for those of us down in the weed of power supply design . For this app the power supply is used and design for a different purpose more quiet and flexible on voltage to achieve desired sound or tone . HI-FI is looking for a very quiet low ESR wide band with very low voltage change not at all the same thing . You do a very nice job of help amp tech with the knowledge they need to do good work .
Interesting. So my amp has been humming off an on when I turn the reverb up. I did replace caps not to long ago. I have no idea if they were power cap or filter caps. If there’s even a difference .
Do you take these amps straight from the box and do a complete setup so they work as they are supposed to. I like the 65 Deluxe Reverb and had an original. I want to have that unmolested Fender tone with a properly set up amp. I just need a well skilled tech to make it happen and a price.
What would I need to do to slow down the tremolo speed in my 68 custom deluxe reissue amp? I never use the highest trem speed setting so it wouldn't matter to me if that was affected.
@@PsionicAudio LOL! It was never the filter cap. You troubleshoot in the wrong order, finally fix the cause, then credit the FIRST thing you attempted to fix? You're really not very good at this. LOL!
@@BradsGuitarGarage The hum wasn't the glaring issue (and I couldn't even hear it on laptop speakers) but he also incorrectly conflated that with the reverb tube issue.
Which -- you'll have to trust me -- I said right to the screen as soon as I heard it, "It's the reverb 12AT7. Why aren't you swapping the preamp tubes to rule that out!?!"
Lyle, as far as tremolo thud, have you ever swapped in a sovtek 12AX7C for the tremolo tube and it reduce the tremolo thud? I've ran into that. BTW, I liked this one because it was a bit unexpected. Like to see that.
I have one of these amps, I am generally happy with it but I do notice that the bass is kinda booming and I think what you are saying around 7:45 kind of explains that, thank you.
they have less negative feedback, that's why they're bassier. the speaker impedance curve has a bigger impact on the frequency response of the power amp
It is a simple mod. I jumpered that resistor on my 68 Custom Princeton and I have a better control of the Bass. I haven’t done it on my 68 Deluxe Reveb cuz I usually play on the second channel. That resistor is only on the first channel, what Fender calls the Bassman tone stack.
Lyle, which of the two channels in a Deluxe Reverb has the most volume and tone? There seems to be a controversy over which channel would be the one to chose if building a single channel Deluxe. A tech friend and I are on opposite sides of the issue. ❤️ your channel! Thanxz
They have the “same amount of tone” just different characteristics. The Vibrato channel potentially has a little more gain but that can be reversed if resistors in the circuit are out of spec.
It sure does. It also has bleed over from each channel. You need to keep the volume of the unused channel at zero otherwise you will get unwanted noise in the channel you are using.
does running the reverb circuit without a tank fry the reverb transformer? I've heard it's pretty much like an output transformer, you don't want to send signal into it when it has nowhere to go. your thoughts?
Won’t hurt for quick testing like this but if you’re going to use a Fender like this with no tank connected, pull the reverb driver tube (V3 on most of them, V2 on a Princeton).
Question, if you can help me..... I have a Bogen CHB 100 want to use for home audio.. why does the 750 Ohm 7 Watt ( doing choke duty?) anyway , it flames out time and again even up to a 25 Watt replacement? If you can help, would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!.
The more I think about it the more I realize that channel switching amps just do the same thing two or three or four times. And it's all a compromise. But it is nice to have two amps in one if they are both good.
‘79 might have the unbypassed 470 or 680 ohm. Can be merciless on the tube. Change for 2.K bypassed with a 22uf. Will be the same AC signal but less DC stress on the tube (to oversimplify). Needs the voltage for the current swing, which is right at the edge of what a 12AT7 can provide. Notice the standalone reverb unit used a 6V6 as the driver. The reverb driver stage is an output stage driving a small output transformer into an 8 ohm load.
I consider myself a smart man, and as a smart man, I accept your a smarter man than me when it comes to guitar amps. I think I'll take precautionary measures and just replace the caps in my deluxe.
Those aren’t what they used to be. Now they’re small caps in a big blue tube. And the quality has gone down but the price is high. No bueno, no gracias.
@@PsionicAudio hmm, that’s very interesting to know. I guess I’ll give a little more thought if I want to buy Sprague atoms as filter caps for my next project.
That lead dress issue really surprised me - seems as though it's more than a QA issue, but a layout issue. Leads sensitive like that should have been 'designed for manufacturing' such that they'd be optimized for minimal noise and then -- immovable. Am I missing something obvious?
I don't care what Brad say's. I stopped watching hin last year when he posted the vid of him breaking LP's and dropping F bomb's and getting political. never watched him since. Angry politics do not belong in amp repair video's (or, frankly, anywhere else) I like yer stuff, Keep it up! :)
Everyone has ups and downs.. he was going through some stuff. Brads on the spectrum and as a fellow non-typical its often our misfortune to disengage the filter from time to time. Especially when things aren't going great personally. I don't think he gives a hoot about the commercial side of it anyway. He's evidently not poor. ;)
Amps just aren't built to last now, they're designed for the convenience of the manufacturer rather than for reliability or serviceability and aimed at bedroom players who will never let the amp roll out of a tour bus.
Hello,thx for posting! How to get rid of the white noise on these?? I was about to buy a 68 Deluxe and finally went another way because of this stupid white noise lol. Sad because it sounds good and is a beautiful amp.
Those 68 customs are good sounding amp’s but they do tend to be noisy af. Sometimes obnoxiously so. That said my #1 amp is an original 68 Super Reverb, from before they were all changed to the silverface circuit, and it can sometimes make noise too. But at gig & rehearsal volumes it’s not an issue to me. The only real problem I’ve ever had with it (other than having to lug its heavy/awkward sized ass all over the PNW) is at one certain venue where I’d occasionally pick up the 10’ Clock news. I’d literally have Dan Rather coming through my speakers & everyone in the club would burst out laughing. It wasn’t funny to me though - it was freaking embarrassing- especially when it happened during a quiet bridge or intro part. When I’d plug into a different outlet it would usually go away. And since it was intermittent- you might get through half the set list before it’d happen- so sound check would never seem to catch it.