I have a 1977 Marshall Master Lead Combo 2x12. When I heard you say " Ill just slide the chassis out", I thought to myself, oh no you're not lol! It took me an hour (and much swearing!) to get mine out, and after checking the bits I understood and spraying cleaner into the pots, I then put it back together..... and its worse than ever! So, its sat in the spare room ever since, waiting for a miracle worker such as yourself to appear near me. Oh, how I wish I could post you my amp lol! I bought it for a tenner about 20 years ago so it owes me nothing, but one day it will sing again.... rather than hum, crackle and get very hot :(
You've never seen one in the shop because this is the first one to ever break down. Even at that, it wasn't actually broken, it just outlived the smoothing caps. Say what you want about solid state, but it's a fair bit more reliable and maintenance free than valves. Yes, it has a sterile tone, but that's what pedals are for. My favorite amp is my '77 Peavey BASS which looks very similar to that SS Marshall on the inside. It got its first cap change on its 45th birthday. Been rock solid, no issues at all for all these long decades.
Perhaps Stuart never saw one before because very few of them were sold, or maybe very few of them were sold in his general area. It's difficult and probably inaccurate to make generalizations when you only have a sample size of one. It's also kind of an oddball, funny looking amp with only a few knobs and a big cabinet, and so it's hard to imagine that it would be a "standout" that grabs people's attention in a music store and yells "try me"!. Not all products that sell well are "good" and not all products that sell poorly are "bad"; but it's difficult to know the difference if there were are very few of that particular device around that you can try as a player or work on as a tech. That said, from a tech's perspective (50+ years in electronics, myself) this is a very simple looking device and likely wouldn't be difficult to service as long as the transformer's okay and it doesn't use any unusual transistors that aren't easily obtained or substituted for.
I too repaired and built amps in the late 70's and agree on there simplicity compared to the modern amps. However now amps have fancy anti distortion and clipping circuitry and DC protection. In the 70's amps if an output transistor failed as they often did then you could kiss goodbye to your speakers too more often than not. Keep up the good work. Love the videos.
Great video. Old electrolytic caps make an amp sound very nasal. No low end, no sparkling highs and loss of definition besides hum. I have a lead 12 I have to recap. Love the amp in the video!
I have never seen this Marshall either. It was massive cool that you were able to deduce the crackling issue before removing the chassis! Brilliantly done, Stuart. Cheers!
Once again: Very nice. But I'm confused (?) that you never start to look att the schematic... (I ALWAYS start in that end- to see for expected voltages, odd components etc...) But I guess you have such a experience that you "know" what to expect. And that extra job on the lamp!!!! I know no technician that would do that.... because you can't charge the customer for all that extra work... RESPECT!!!
I thoroughly enjoy all of your videos and have learned so much from you. Thanks again for all the work you put into making these for other amp techs, you are very appreciated. Cheers from Chicago.
Thank you for another entertaining lesson on working on these older amplifiers. I am learning much from your videos. I believe your systematic troubleshooting is the most valuable lesson I have learned. I picked up an old nonfunctional B&K 625 tube tester and was able to repair it by using your methodical, simple troubleshooting. Thank you for speaking to the newbies as there is much I have to learn. Wonderful video of amp I've never seen before. Thanks again, Stuart.
Great video again Stuart. I remember a few of that design knocking around in the 1970's. Simple, effective and reliable as long as you didn't spill a pint of Watneys Red Barrel over them. Nice looking amplifier with the upright 2X12 configuration and it didn't look like a pain in the rear to repair either.
Good fix Stuart. Those amps look really cool from the outside. They were mail order amps. I can remember seeing them in the Bell Musical Instrument catalogue when I was a teenager.
Back in the 1980s I had a Marshall Lead 20 solid state combo, which sounded pretty good for a solid state amp. There was a 12 watt version as well. The pots unfortunately were very low quality and subject to being noisy no matter how often you cleaned them, and there was some internal hum radiated into the audio signal due to the location and orientation of the transformer.
@@bjornstromberg7975, according to a guitarist and music shop owner I went to school with, yes, noisy, intermittent pots was indeed a common problem with Marshall solidstate amps of this era. My Lead 20 was probably a generation or two after this amplifier however because mine had all the pots mounted on a long strip of circuit board and not individually wired and mounted like they are on this amp. The pots in this same amp would be easy to change but they would not have been on my own amplifier....
@@stuartukguitarampguy5830 , It's kind of funny looking and almost lopsided with a big cabinet and the half empty face plate with only a couple of knobs. It doesn't really look like a stage-performance amp and it doesn't really look like a practice amp, so it's neither fish nor fowl. Perhaps these just didn't sell well.
13:30 ... About the transformer AC ... The common 3 lead center tap transformers divide the Mains in 2 phases that are 180 degrees from each other. If you put the leads on these points the meter sums the phases ex: 20 + (-20) and the result is close to 0. This doesn't happen if one lead is on a fixed voltage.
I had one of these but it was a beige colour and it suffered from some sort of thermal run away problem, as it warmed up it made a motorboat sound, and you would have to turn it off untill it cooled down, if you turned it upside down you'd get another ten minutes or so before it happened again
i love your videos . i seem to learn something on everyone i watch . you explain everything so great even a beginner like me can understand and learn from them thank you .i do have a question about this one so on the cans when you was explaining the wiring the red wire is coming from the center tap then the purple is negative. the question is why wouldn't you ground the purple negative side and not the center tap wouldn't it just short out the can? this one has me stumped because i know it is right just don't understand how it works. thanks again i have learned a lot from your videos
It's a bit hard to explain simply but if you ground the centre tap of a secondary winding, the other two sides give you two equal antiphase signals. That probably didn't help!
lol well a little it does but i have no problem doing the research to learn how it works ..with you giving me the solution now i know exactly how to word it to get the rest. sometimes learning is having the beginning and the end. to learn why is the middle, lol i am just delighted that you replied. most of the time nobody replies anymore . thank you @@stuartukguitarampguy5830
I have a cheap dental mirror which is backlit by an LED that aims at the mirror, powered by a AA battery. Very very useful! The original mirror was plastic and eventually got scratched up so I replaced it with a glass one stolen from another inspection mirror.
The reason the amplifier sort of worked is because the amplifier has a plus/minus (+/-) power supply, and the power transformer therefore has ---- *must* have ---- a grounded centertap for the secondaries; and as one leg of the secondary intermittently disconnected itself from the circuit (touching the soldered connection intermittently or perhaps hanging by a cold soldered thread) You still had some voltage being fed to half of the project of fire by the one remaining secondary and the chassis grounded center tap. This would have given you only a half wave power supply with lots of ripple on it as either the plus supply or the minus supply went missing in action. There are other possibilities also involving maybe a shorted filter cap or some other way that you could still get plus and minus voltages to the output stage (are they a complimentary NPN/PNP pair, or not) , but regardless it's clear that you can disconnect one secondary and still get AC voltage to the bridge rectifier because of the center tap on the output side of the transformer, and DC output from the bridge....
PS, I looked more closely and the outputs are definitely complementary devices that run on a plus / minus power supply. Temporary loss of either could cause DC offset and fry the speakers (as well as loud hum), so it's probably just as well that a wire broke off of the speakers to protect them! 😉
A variable DC power supply is handy for experimenting with LED's to determine what voltage to run them at for a good brightness level without causing overheating of the LED; and since they only need about 3 V more or less at very low current a resistor-substitution switch box is also handy because it prevents you having to substitute different resistor values one at a time to figure out how to drop your 20 or 30 V power supply down to the 3 V needed for the LED. It's also generally best not to shove the LED right up against the front of the bulb jewel or colored lens because LED'S are far more "beamy" and don't have a more omnidirectional light pattern as an incandescent or neon lamp would.
Love seeing these uncommon amps...what were those speakers?...they looked like original 70's Green or Blackback Celestions.. interesting that Marshall didn't put cheaper speakers in an inexpensive line
The amp might not necessarily have been stored in terribly damp conditions, because the faceplate and the rest of the chassis looks pretty decent. The wood cabinet, however, probably absorbed sufficient moist air that it accelerated the process of the glues in the plywood or particle board (likely formaldehyde or urea/urethane based) corroding the screws. The other hardware appears to be stainless steel and wasn't affected, but it may also have had minimal contact with the wood cabinet. Anyway, screws in a wooden guitar, just like the screws in a wooden cabinet here, might be more likely to rust simply because the wood becomes a mildly thirsty, spongy trap for moisture, and the wood may also contain natural resins or artificial glues that accelerate or exacerbate the corrosion process. Add some finger schmutz and skin oils and salty sweat into the mix, and a guitar stored in a damp place is likely to undergo noticeable corrosion.
Just found this channel. 😊Very good. Question : i have a few solid state amps old, British when turn power switch on theres a loud crack/bang from speaker. I've used amps since 1980 and many have done this.. They work ok but i dont like thus turn on "crack * bang sound. Is there a way to stop this or does some cap need replacing? I thought i read years ago that there is a fix for this...? The amps i have that have problem is Vox Escort bass combo quite old.. Some caps were replaced about 20 years ago.. And other is that late 70's. Modelling amp built into flightcase by PA:CE, sorry i forgot name.. That really is scary bang on power up.. Its never been serviced and needs one.. Its missing the speakers and flight case box. Redmere is name, models a Marshall, Fender Twin and Vox its claimed and weird touch switches and built in sustain and chorus, flanger.. Thanks
Hi This is one of the more tricky things to sort and often cannot be. It's usually the design of the amp. A cap charges up quickly on power-on and this DC spike gets transferred to the speaker causing that bang. No easy answer I'm afraid.
Note the roll of self-adhesive numbers on the shelf, up behind the amp sitting on Stuart's bench. I presume Stuart uses them to number all his guitars, for when he's up on stage, like Pete Townshend does for his multitude of performance guitars!😉
They always told me if you wouldn't lay your head down to sleep bec of the place or temperature overnight, it's best not to leave your guitar there either...
Simples, the resistance value is Vs - Vf divided by If. Where Vs is the voltage applied, Vf is the forward operating voltage of the LED and If is the operating current of the LED.
@@stuartukguitarampguy5830 , I am continually surprised by the number of technicians who don't own a resistor substitution box, or in some cases forget they own it and just don't use it for some reason. I have replaced many hundreds of incandescent lamps in old hi-fi stereo receivers, and trying to achieve a suitable brightness level with multiple LED's by substituting individual resisters one by one would drive me nuts ( admittedly, that'd be a short trip in my case 😉).
All the resistors look discoloured, ie they look burnt. It's always a hard call on how much the owner wants to spend to make the amp playable or reliable.
These old Marshall solid state amps were fantastic. Really good tone and more reliable (usually) than a valve amp. Getting harder to find nowadays.
Very cool. Love taking a look inside these old Solid States. Thanks Mr. Stuart.
My pleasure.
I have a 1977 Marshall Master Lead Combo 2x12. When I heard you say " Ill just slide the chassis out", I thought to myself, oh no you're not lol! It took me an hour (and much swearing!) to get mine out, and after checking the bits I understood and spraying cleaner into the pots, I then put it back together..... and its worse than ever! So, its sat in the spare room ever since, waiting for a miracle worker such as yourself to appear near me. Oh, how I wish I could post you my amp lol!
I bought it for a tenner about 20 years ago so it owes me nothing, but one day it will sing again.... rather than hum, crackle and get very hot :(
Yes it was a PIG to get out! Happy to look at it if you can get it to me.
You've never seen one in the shop because this is the first one to ever break down. Even at that, it wasn't actually broken, it just outlived the smoothing caps.
Say what you want about solid state, but it's a fair bit more reliable and maintenance free than valves. Yes, it has a sterile tone, but that's what pedals are for. My favorite amp is my '77 Peavey BASS which looks very similar to that SS Marshall on the inside. It got its first cap change on its 45th birthday. Been rock solid, no issues at all for all these long decades.
Perhaps Stuart never saw one before because very few of them were sold, or maybe very few of them were sold in his general area. It's difficult and probably inaccurate to make generalizations when you only have a sample size of one. It's also kind of an oddball, funny looking amp with only a few knobs and a big cabinet, and so it's hard to imagine that it would be a "standout" that grabs people's attention in a music store and yells "try me"!. Not all products that sell well are "good" and not all products that sell poorly are "bad"; but it's difficult to know the difference if there were are very few of that particular device around that you can try as a player or work on as a tech. That said, from a tech's perspective (50+ years in electronics, myself) this is a very simple looking device and likely wouldn't be difficult to service as long as the transformer's okay and it doesn't use any unusual transistors that aren't easily obtained or substituted for.
Another contributor has said these were mail order only, apparently.
I too repaired and built amps in the late 70's and agree on there simplicity compared to the modern amps. However now amps have fancy anti distortion and clipping circuitry and DC protection. In the 70's amps if an output transistor failed as they often did then you could kiss goodbye to your speakers too more often than not. Keep up the good work. Love the videos.
Thanks Stewart
You’re such a cool guy with massive amounts of knowledge. Loving your videos
Thanks!!
Pretty straightforward design. Not too complicated. Probably sounds nice with pedals. Good job Stuart!
Thanks Zack,
Great video. Old electrolytic caps make an amp sound very nasal. No low end, no sparkling highs and loss of definition besides hum. I have a lead 12 I have to recap. Love the amp in the video!
Thanks!
I have never seen this Marshall either. It was massive cool that you were able to deduce the crackling issue before removing the chassis! Brilliantly done, Stuart. Cheers!
Thanks Alex! It's almost as though I've seen that fault before...
Once again: Very nice. But I'm confused (?) that you never start to look att the schematic... (I ALWAYS start in that end- to see for expected voltages, odd components etc...) But I guess you have such a experience that you "know" what to expect. And that extra job on the lamp!!!! I know no technician that would do that.... because you can't charge the customer for all that extra work... RESPECT!!!
Schematic? Schematic? That's for weaklings....
I thoroughly enjoy all of your videos and have learned so much from you. Thanks again for all the work you put into making these for other amp techs, you are very appreciated. Cheers from Chicago.
Thanks! I've visited Chicago many times. Somewhat chilly in the winter...
Nice job on solving the lamp problem!! Very innovative!!
Thanks Bert
Thank you for another entertaining lesson on working on these older amplifiers. I am learning much from your videos. I believe your systematic troubleshooting is the most valuable lesson I have learned. I picked up an old nonfunctional B&K 625 tube tester and was able to repair it by using your methodical, simple troubleshooting.
Thank you for speaking to the newbies as there is much I have to learn.
Wonderful video of amp I've never seen before.
Thanks again, Stuart.
Thanks Michael I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Very nice amp Stuart..Unusual..! Great fix, and love what you did with the pilot light..Keep em' coming..Ed..uk..😀
Will do Cap'n!
I look forward to all your videos, Stuart. I always learn something and I enjoy the variety of amps you get to work on. Thanks again.
Cheers Greg.
Great video again Stuart. I remember a few of that design knocking around in the 1970's. Simple, effective and reliable as long as you didn't spill a pint of Watneys Red Barrel over them. Nice looking amplifier with the upright 2X12 configuration and it didn't look like a pain in the rear to repair either.
I wish they were all so straightforward!
I do much enjoy your videos . This one was special , as I've also never seen that model Marshall . Cheers from Montreal 👍
Glad you enjoyed it
Just stumbled across your channel - nice work ! I'm looking forward to the videos coming.
Cheers Dirk!
Good fix Stuart. Those amps look really cool from the outside. They were mail order amps. I can remember seeing them in the Bell Musical Instrument catalogue when I was a teenager.
Ah that makes sense now. I think it was a bit of a marketing thing because it LOOKS like a 'proper' stage amp, but is really only a practice amp.
Yes, I think you are right there. There must have been one or two disappointed people after delivery.@@stuartukguitarampguy5830
Back in the 1980s I had a Marshall Lead 20 solid state combo, which sounded pretty good for a solid state amp. There was a 12 watt version as well. The pots unfortunately were very low quality and subject to being noisy no matter how often you cleaned them, and there was some internal hum radiated into the audio signal due to the location and orientation of the transformer.
I've noticed that one of the pot in the amp seem to be changed.... maybe a common fault?
@@bjornstromberg7975, according to a guitarist and music shop owner I went to school with, yes, noisy, intermittent pots was indeed a common problem with Marshall solidstate amps of this era. My Lead 20 was probably a generation or two after this amplifier however because mine had all the pots mounted on a long strip of circuit board and not individually wired and mounted like they are on this amp. The pots in this same amp would be easy to change but they would not have been on my own amplifier....
That's a groovy looking Marshall 👍
Quite rare I think. I doubt many were sold.
Great fix Stuart. A very unusual amp from Marshall no doubt. I certainly have never heard of one.
Yes it was a new one to me.
@@stuartukguitarampguy5830 , It's kind of funny looking and almost lopsided with a big cabinet and the half empty face plate with only a couple of knobs. It doesn't really look like a stage-performance amp and it doesn't really look like a practice amp, so it's neither fish nor fowl. Perhaps these just didn't sell well.
Yes I think that's right. It's neither one thing or the other.
Nice work ,Stuart good for another Forty Years!
Thanks!
Nice one Stuart, keep those videos coming, greetings from Colombia.
Glad you liked it.
13:30 ... About the transformer AC ...
The common 3 lead center tap transformers divide the Mains in 2 phases that are 180 degrees from each other.
If you put the leads on these points the meter sums the phases ex: 20 + (-20) and the result is close to 0.
This doesn't happen if one lead is on a fixed voltage.
Nice one Young Stuart!!
I had one of these but it was a beige colour and it suffered from some sort of thermal run away problem, as it warmed up it made a motorboat sound, and you would have to turn it off untill it cooled down, if you turned it upside down you'd get another ten minutes or so before it happened again
Just use it upside down. Sorted!
i love your videos . i seem to learn something on everyone i watch . you explain everything so great even a beginner like me can understand and learn from them thank you .i do have a question about this one so on the cans when you was explaining the wiring the red wire is coming from the center tap then the purple is negative. the question is why wouldn't you ground the purple negative side and not the center tap wouldn't it just short out the can? this one has me stumped because i know it is right just don't understand how it works. thanks again i have learned a lot from your videos
It's a bit hard to explain simply but if you ground the centre tap of a secondary winding, the other two sides give you two equal antiphase signals. That probably didn't help!
lol well a little it does but i have no problem doing the research to learn how it works ..with you giving me the solution now i know exactly how to word it to get the rest. sometimes learning is having the beginning and the end. to learn why is the middle, lol i am just delighted that you replied. most of the time nobody replies anymore . thank you @@stuartukguitarampguy5830
I have a cheap dental mirror which is backlit by an LED that aims at the mirror, powered by a AA battery. Very very useful! The original mirror was plastic and eventually got scratched up so I replaced it with a glass one stolen from another inspection mirror.
Hmm, nice idea! Must gey myself one.
The reason the amplifier sort of worked is because the amplifier has a plus/minus (+/-) power supply, and the power transformer therefore has ---- *must* have ---- a grounded centertap for the secondaries; and as one leg of the secondary intermittently disconnected itself from the circuit (touching the soldered connection intermittently or perhaps hanging by a cold soldered thread) You still had some voltage being fed to half of the project of fire by the one remaining secondary and the chassis grounded center tap. This would have given you only a half wave power supply with lots of ripple on it as either the plus supply or the minus supply went missing in action. There are other possibilities also involving maybe a shorted filter cap or some other way that you could still get plus and minus voltages to the output stage (are they a complimentary NPN/PNP pair, or not) , but regardless it's clear that you can disconnect one secondary and still get AC voltage to the bridge rectifier because of the center tap on the output side of the transformer, and DC output from the bridge....
PS, I looked more closely and the outputs are definitely complementary devices that run on a plus / minus power supply. Temporary loss of either could cause DC offset and fry the speakers (as well as loud hum), so it's probably just as well that a wire broke off of the speakers to protect them! 😉
A variable DC power supply is handy for experimenting with LED's to determine what voltage to run them at for a good brightness level without causing overheating of the LED; and since they only need about 3 V more or less at very low current a resistor-substitution switch box is also handy because it prevents you having to substitute different resistor values one at a time to figure out how to drop your 20 or 30 V power supply down to the 3 V needed for the LED. It's also generally best not to shove the LED right up against the front of the bulb jewel or colored lens because LED'S are far more "beamy" and don't have a more omnidirectional light pattern as an incandescent or neon lamp would.
Seems that they always used that light pink insulation colour wire in that era British amps. 😅
What are you trying to say??? That's fighting talk.
Love seeing these uncommon amps...what were those speakers?...they looked like original 70's Green or Blackback Celestions.. interesting that Marshall didn't put cheaper speakers in an inexpensive line
Hi Ricky
I didn;t really notice what the speakers were, sorry.
@@stuartukguitarampguy5830no worries... keep up the good work!
7:55 - Hello little fishies!
The amp might not necessarily have been stored in terribly damp conditions, because the faceplate and the rest of the chassis looks pretty decent. The wood cabinet, however, probably absorbed sufficient moist air that it accelerated the process of the glues in the plywood or particle board (likely formaldehyde or urea/urethane based) corroding the screws. The other hardware appears to be stainless steel and wasn't affected, but it may also have had minimal contact with the wood cabinet. Anyway, screws in a wooden guitar, just like the screws in a wooden cabinet here, might be more likely to rust simply because the wood becomes a mildly thirsty, spongy trap for moisture, and the wood may also contain natural resins or artificial glues that accelerate or exacerbate the corrosion process. Add some finger schmutz and skin oils and salty sweat into the mix, and a guitar stored in a damp place is likely to undergo noticeable corrosion.
Yes I think you're right there. The rest of it was in exellent condition.
Just found this channel. 😊Very good. Question : i have a few solid state amps old, British when turn power switch on theres a loud crack/bang from speaker. I've used amps since 1980 and many have done this.. They work ok but i dont like thus turn on "crack * bang sound. Is there a way to stop this or does some cap need replacing? I thought i read years ago that there is a fix for this...? The amps i have that have problem is Vox Escort bass combo quite old.. Some caps were replaced about 20 years ago.. And other is that late 70's. Modelling amp built into flightcase by PA:CE, sorry i forgot name.. That really is scary bang on power up.. Its never been serviced and needs one.. Its missing the speakers and flight case box. Redmere is name, models a Marshall, Fender Twin and Vox its claimed and weird touch switches and built in sustain and chorus, flanger.. Thanks
Redmere Soloist:
ruclips.net/video/4SKEZglt9cg/видео.htmlsi=j6Pz0bZpDNZKyGJY
Hi This is one of the more tricky things to sort and often cannot be. It's usually the design of the amp. A cap charges up quickly on power-on and this DC spike gets transferred to the speaker causing that bang. No easy answer I'm afraid.
I would love to have it
Yes for some reason I really took to this amp. Nostalgia probably!
This is the first time I ever seen one. I thought I seen them all.
Hello Stuart i had a question for you so i have a fender deluxe 90 dsp which has a crackling problem could you maybe help me finding the problem ?
Hi, sorry but that could be SO many things! You'll need to find a local tech to have a look. All the best
Thank you for making these! I don't know flat about any of this but one day i'd like to try it out!
Hi Garret There are loads of great RUclips vids. It's amazing what you can pick up from those.
Try Terry at D-labs, also Uncle Doug
Note the roll of self-adhesive numbers on the shelf, up behind the amp sitting on Stuart's bench. I presume Stuart uses them to number all his guitars, for when he's up on stage, like Pete Townshend does for his multitude of performance guitars!😉
No, no. They are for amps. My GUITAR numbers are on a different reel. Numbered 3,000-15,000.
They always told me if you wouldn't lay your head down to sleep bec of the place or temperature overnight, it's best not to leave your guitar there either...
Yes good advice!
How did you decide on a 1.8kohm series resistor for that indicator LED?
Trial and error! I have a resistance decade box. I can just dial in resistors.
Simples, the resistance value is Vs - Vf divided by If. Where Vs is the voltage applied, Vf is the forward operating voltage of the LED and If is the operating current of the LED.
@@stuartukguitarampguy5830 , I am continually surprised by the number of technicians who don't own a resistor substitution box, or in some cases forget they own it and just don't use it for some reason. I have replaced many hundreds of incandescent lamps in old hi-fi stereo receivers, and trying to achieve a suitable brightness level with multiple LED's by substituting individual resisters one by one would drive me nuts ( admittedly, that'd be a short trip in my case 😉).
All the resistors look discoloured, ie they look burnt. It's always a hard call on how much the owner wants to spend to make the amp playable or reliable.
Hi, no they were all fine. Maybe a trick of the light?
I wouldn't think the amp is worth much being solid state.
Very disappointing, you didn't play in the Amp to show what it sounded like when it was working.
Yes you're right, I should have!
💘 *Promo SM*
Wierd looking amp.
Yes I think it was supposed to look 'fab', 'cool', 'gear'; and so on!