Marvin Posted Thursday at 10:58 Posted Thursday at 10:58 As anyone who owns one of these amps knows, they sound great, have all the gubbins you need on them, are loud BUT so is the fan. It's a bit like having your own aircon unit soundwise. When you're playing it's not an issue, I wouldn't sell it just because of the fan noier but, we'll you know.🙂 Has anyone sourced a quiter replacement fan? From what I've researched it's tricky if not impossible. Quote
NHM Posted Thursday at 15:10 Posted Thursday at 15:10 I'm a fan (geddit?) of these amps too, really punchy, full sound, I have one which is my back-up. It is only used in loud situations so the noise isn't a problem for me. 1 Quote
Marvin Posted yesterday at 15:45 Author Posted yesterday at 15:45 Well, the fan is incredibly quiet now. Heard a tiny click after I turned the amp on, and then no power. It's now a large paperweight. 1 Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted yesterday at 17:38 Posted yesterday at 17:38 1 hour ago, Marvin said: Heard a tiny click after I turned the amp Fuses checked? Quote
Hellzero Posted yesterday at 18:34 Posted yesterday at 18:34 Just in case the amp starts working again use the below mentioned Noctua fan with their tension adapter from 24 to 12 Volts. These are the most silent fan you'll find. https://noctua.at/en/na-vc1 https://noctua.at/en/nf-a6x15-flx Everything is available from Amazon. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Noctua-NA-VC1-Step-down-Converter-Applications/dp/B0C6TQCQP7/ https://www.amazon.co.uk/Noctua-NF-A6x15-FLX-Premium-60x15mm/dp/B0DJMHV4RP/ 1 Quote
Marvin Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago 4 hours ago, Stub Mandrel said: Fuses checked? The internal fuse looks blown. I've ordered some new ones, but I'm not hopeful that's the source of the problem. I think the fuse blew because there's a deeper problem. 1 Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago I wouldn't give up... fuses can degrade over time. An instant fail like that suggests inrush current. But could be a failed PSU capacitor, for example. 1 1 Quote
Hellzero Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago Some fuse holders, especially the ones integrated in the power socket, have a place for a spare fuse, did you check that? That said, you should always have some spare fuses at hand. If it's only a blown fuse, it will be the more expensive one. 😉 As @Stub Mandrel said, inrush current or a huge surge can blow a fuse instantly... 1 Quote
Marvin Posted 6 hours ago Author Posted 6 hours ago I have changed the internal fuse... quite a firework. A cracking noise, a spark that shot out of the fan and it tripped the house consumer unit. Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 3 hours ago, Marvin said: I have changed the internal fuse... quite a firework. A cracking noise, a spark that shot out of the fan and it tripped the house consumer unit. Is the fuse on the high side (i.e. mains side of the transformer) or between the PSU and the amp or speaker outputs? Quote
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