JMP-1 Service - 230V to 120V Conversion and Battery Upgrade

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • I purchased an old JMP-1 unit from a seller in the U.S. who had at some point originally purchased this from Europe so it was setup to run on 230V. They even included the step-up transformer with the sale. The price was great and the conversion is a very simple process. I also remove the button cell battery from these amps and modify them to use two AA batteries that will be accessible without having to open the chassis. In a touring situation this reduces downtime considerably. My last modified JMP-1 had the battery last approximately 10 years and I travelled with it all over the world. When it was time to change it out my tech was able to do it without having to remove the preamp from my rack so we didn't lose valuable set up time on stage.
    It is important to note that strange problems arise when the battery finally bites the dust. You may encounter an error code on the front panel as well as strange high pitch noises on higher gain settings and some buttons may not function properly. To restore the amp to normal operation you must change out the battery and perform a factory reset. The reset procedure may have to be done more than once. To reset the unit, hold OD1 and Clean 1 while powering the unit on. If you saved your settings through a MIDI dump they can be uploaded back to the unit after the reset has been performed.
    Below is link to the full schematic and handbook. Programming these can be a little tough so it's good to have the handbook available. These units work great when paired with a proper MIDI controller like the Behringer FCB1010.
    drive.google.c...

Комментарии • 28

  • @ebheron
    @ebheron 28 дней назад +1

    Thanks to this video I managed to change the voltage on my JMP! Only thing is I live in a 220v region so I converted mine from 110v to 220v, now I don't need to use a step down transformer anymore, great vid and it great help, thanks mate!

    • @purgasound
      @purgasound  28 дней назад +1

      @@ebheron awesome! I'm glad this helped you out!

  • @romaindepla
    @romaindepla 2 месяца назад

    I’ll be pleased to see your marshall and Tokai collection !

  • @Ancient_West
    @Ancient_West 6 месяцев назад +2

    I love how your channel feeds the guitarist side of me and the electronics nerd side. I love seeing you jam out and i love seeing you mess with electronics.

  • @80srocker65
    @80srocker65 5 месяцев назад +1

    Cool video great sounding amp

  • @michaelmitchell5909
    @michaelmitchell5909 6 месяцев назад +2

    That thing sounds awesome...great job man.

  • @danielvought1802
    @danielvought1802 5 месяцев назад

    Whoa 😮 these sound awesome!!

  • @tommyservo9660
    @tommyservo9660 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for linking the schematic.

  • @JoelGrindMusic
    @JoelGrindMusic 6 месяцев назад +1

    awesome, I replaced the battery in my MP-1 a couple months ago and soldered in a battery holder that fits the OG battery type, never thought to use AA, cool idea since those are a lot more common to find on tour.

  • @heavyasi1981
    @heavyasi1981 6 месяцев назад +2

    I ordered a used one from Guitar Center a year ago and they shipped it in a 2 foot tall box by 1 1/2 sides with bubble wrap and foam above the preamp, the ear of the preamp was bent just like this one, I was so bummed! I scored though, a friend who owns a music store had one for very good condition so I swooped it up!

  • @jamescassidy4045
    @jamescassidy4045 6 месяцев назад

    oh man. That's a bit of a shame what happened to the chassis. I'd be pretty chocked if that was my amp. I know you didn't mean to, and had good intentions though. In my opinion, I would have just left the OG battery style in, as it's really not that hard to unscrew the lid, and pop in a new battery. It's one thing if someone is on tour, but even then they don't die that quick. The main inconvenience maybe if someone was constantly on tour, and reliant on programming is the battery style itself, not just unscrewing the lid, so maybe mounting the AA holder would be possible inside? Just a thought! Cool video though, thanks!

  • @doc_matter
    @doc_matter 6 месяцев назад

    Killer straight to the point videos! Love it. Your so chill to, if I see a new upload I always click!

  • @user-ug6ti3op3x
    @user-ug6ti3op3x 6 месяцев назад +1

    Many people are not informed that European Voltage and Current in appliances are @ 240 volt.

  • @heavyasi1981
    @heavyasi1981 6 месяцев назад +1

    Ha! And I totally have the same obituary shirt! 97 tour???? And mines sleeveless!

  • @K707OR30
    @K707OR30 6 месяцев назад +1

    I’ll never understand why Marshall loves to put cheap electrolytic caps right next to hot components. all the caps are right next to a quad of transistors with no heat sinking in a 1u rack unit. Like that won’t produce any heat. I’d absolutely replace those caps.

  • @TheAxe4Ever
    @TheAxe4Ever 6 месяцев назад +1

    Sounds great! Quick and easy fix. But I gotta say, that Tokai Love Rock sounds and looks incredible. I bet it plays awesome! It might make people angry that I say this, but Tokai makes a Les Paul better than Gibson in my opinion. Tokai…..doing Les Paul’s right!

  • @chrisadams628
    @chrisadams628 26 дней назад

    Is it possible to change out transformers on a 100 watt amp to a lower wattage? I have a Marshall MGHDFX100 head, and 100 watts is just too much in a bedroom setting. Also, is it possible to mod it in a way to have switchable power levels like some of the newer 20 watt Marshall heads? The obvious answer is to buy a head at the wattage I'd prefer, but I have a soft spot for the old Marshall MGs.

    • @purgasound
      @purgasound  25 дней назад +1

      I'm not super familiar with the MG series circuit but they appear to get the output from a TDA7293 100W DMOS amplifier. There is too much going on with the circuit to just swap transformers. To reduce output power you can use a higher impedance load. They deliver maximum clean output power at 4 ohms. If you use an 8 or 16 ohm load you should see a reduction in output power. Cheers!

    • @chrisadams628
      @chrisadams628 25 дней назад

      @@purgasound That makes sense. I am running it into a 16 ohm Marshall Origin 4x12 So I've got that going for me. Thank you for the thorough reply.

  • @powermorcillo2703
    @powermorcillo2703 6 месяцев назад

    Why didn’t you just use a replacement of the original battery? The thing last for ever anyway.

    • @purgasound
      @purgasound  6 месяцев назад +4

      I would still have to unsolder the original tacked in battery just to install a button cell battery holder. I'd rather not have to disassemble the unit to change a battery. It is a potential show stopper if the unit is installed in a rack system. I had a battery die on tour, we were doing arenas as a support act. I had the same setup for that unit. It was a 60 second job as opposed to unhooking all the cabling that goes into a rack rig to pull the whole unit out, clear a workspace to disassemble, reassemble, reinstall and rewire. That's a lot of unnecessary extra work and this modification took the same amount of time as it would to replace it with a battery holder. Plus everyone has AA batteries on tour. I don't have whatever battery this was.

  • @samizdat113
    @samizdat113 6 месяцев назад

    I hate it when people say 230 volt. It's 208-230.

    • @purgasound
      @purgasound  6 месяцев назад +1

      What country does that hold true? It is my understanding that nominal mains voltage in Europe is 230 volts +10% / -6%. That doesn't go down to 208V. Cheers

    • @samizdat113
      @samizdat113 6 месяцев назад

      @@purgasound I was just yanking your chain about you being annoyed with people saying 115. But here in the US we have 208-230 voltage. Anything in that range is acceptable. I am a refrigeration/HVAC tech and if we have a step down transformer in a piece of equipment we often have to confirm incoming voltage and wire the transformer accordingly. If incoming voltage is below 217 use wires A and B, if voltage is 217 or more use wires C and D.

    • @purgasound
      @purgasound  6 месяцев назад +1

      @@samizdat113 hell yeah brother. Much respect to my fellow tradesmen!

  • @n0nyabznss
    @n0nyabznss 6 месяцев назад +2

    1. STOP CALLING IT AN AMP.
    2. That battery mod you did was beyond stupid and unnecessary considering the original holder allows for replacing the battery.. The coin cell battery would outlast a pair of AA/AAA batteries and it won't leak unlike those batteries.
    The only thing you did which was useful was converting the PREAMP to US current.

    • @purgasound
      @purgasound  6 месяцев назад +6

      Lol but this is, by every definition, an amplifier. It takes a small audio signal and amplifies it to a larger signal. You don't have to like the battery modification. That's fine. I did it because it works best for my setup. The amps I used are wired tightly in an enclosed rack. I don't and won't have the time in the middle of a tour to disassemble every cable and connection and snip wire ties to pull out a rack unit to change a battery. Doesn't matter how infrequent that is. Down time is down time and when you already have a busy crew on tour it makes sense to simplify their jobs wherever possible. Cheers

    • @thomasgardner3437
      @thomasgardner3437 28 дней назад

      @nOnabsesstus
      you sir , give dimwitted twits an even worse name.... 😺