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Laney RGB500 Combo Problems


Sinbad
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Hey all...Newbie Here... ;)

Just wonderered if any one can help with the following:

I've blown some components on the input board of my Laney RGB500 combo.

This is probably as a result of a dodgy connection on an active bass that i plugged into my amp. :huh:

This seems to have "spiked" the input causing two fuses on the input board to blow together with
capacitor C1. The fuses are not a problem but the capacitor was blown to pieces so i can't identify
what the part is.

I contacted Laney tech assist by email and recieved a schematic of the amp. This identified the
capacitor in question C1 (immediately after the jack inputs on the diagram) as a 10 nf
electrolytic 100v capacitor.

So far so good, but after several attempts to source the item, all i keep coming up with are huge
capacitors that are about 10 times the size of the footprint of the blown component. :)

I've backed checked with Laney and the item has been confirmed as 10 nf. This dosen't seem to be
correct. I can definately say that the charred remains of the original were a small- bog standard
electrolytic capacitor (one of them purple ones about 10mm high 5mm diameter). I'm wondering
if they are giving me the wrong size (should it be 10 uf??????) - Any body with the above amp prepared
to slip the amp out of the cab and have a look???

Any assistance on this would be gratefully accepted - gigs coming up - dug out my Carlsbro Viper 100
but need to get my Laney working again. ;)

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Hi, I'm struggling to find a 10nf electrolytic but have found 100v 10uf elecs that fit the physical size you mention.Its possible that laney have a missprint on their diagram, although get them to cross check the revision/mod state of your amp.Sometimes when a design is updated the components get re numbered so if your amp is say revision A they might be looking at a later drawing. Hope that makes sense. I would'nt fit a different value component until I was 100% sure. The cap I did find was in cpc. Pt no CAO4963. Make sure you get the polaity right.
Good luck Cheers Just

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Thanks Subthumper

Sorry for delayed reply, busy week.
The 10uf seems to be the most likely answer to this one, spoke to a mate who does a bit of the electronics stuff.
Going to check again with laney as to thre amp revision as you suggest.
Thanks again.

Keep on rockin
Steve

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