A Marshall update...
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A Marshall update...
I have a Marshall Valvestate 100watt combo amp. I got it from a pawn shop in WV. It is in nice shape, it's from 1996. I run a Digitech 55 in front of it on the clean channel. The backs on these are wide open, so i cut a piece of wood and enclosed the cabinet behind the speaker up to about 2 inches below the back of head. I replaced the tube in it with a Groove Tube. I love the sound of this amp, power and clarity. The problem is about 3 hours into practice I notice it doesn't have the same punch as it does in the begining. It doesn't seem to be getting hot or anything and the speaker seems fine. It did this before I enclosed the speaker so I don't believe that's the problem. Is this normal? Would replacing the speaker fix this?
The sound it's making sounds the same as breathing in a mic. Like wind hiting a mic and coming thru a PA. What could be causing this? It's not all the time, alot when you first fire it up. Then it happens off and on after that.
The sound it's making sounds the same as breathing in a mic. Like wind hiting a mic and coming thru a PA. What could be causing this? It's not all the time, alot when you first fire it up. Then it happens off and on after that.
Last edited by FretlessJazz on Wednesday Jan 26, 2011, edited 1 time in total.
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- BloodyFingers
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You r amp was open back which means it was designed to used that way. Closing it up could cause issues with heating up to much......
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The valvestate amps have a solid state power section, hence the moniker valve-state. You can't bias a solid state amplifier, no matter how hard you try.jai wrote:i'd make sure the bias is in the proper range first of all,
As a side note the TSL can be fixed by changeing the bridge rectifier, which is undersized.
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The amp was doing this before I enclosed the speaker. It actually took the amp alot longer to get muddy after I did this, before I enclosed the speaker the amp would go only about a half hour before losing clarity. And I did not cover the enclose the top half of the amp so it would be vented well and air could move. At the end of a four hour practice I reached into the back of the amp and put my hand on the bottom of the amp head and felt all around and nothing felt even slightly warm. I'm not sure that a basically solid state amp will over heat.
Could the speaker be doing this?
Could the speaker be doing this?
Be good to one another...
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- Active Member
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Saturday Aug 14, 2010
- Location: Washington, Pa.
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- Active Member
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Saturday Aug 14, 2010
- Location: Washington, Pa.
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- Active Member
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Saturday Aug 14, 2010
- Location: Washington, Pa.
-
- Active Member
- Posts: 48
- Joined: Saturday Aug 14, 2010
- Location: Washington, Pa.