53 fender Champ Question
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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53 fender Champ Question
I just got a beat up old '53 Champ. All the wiring and electronics are original and have never been tampered with. I sprayed the pots and the tone pot acts as volume as well as the vol pot. What could be the trouble? Bad cap? Thanks Otis
- Matthew Prouty
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There might not be anything wrong with it. These tone pots and tone stacks are very lossy in the 5C1 and 5D1 series. It was not until the E series came along and sloved a lot of tone stack issues. The tone pot on the C series and D series attenuates the signal across a wide band. If it does not affect the tone at all, just volume then the caps are bad and it is attenuating all frequencies to ground. You can replace the caps on the tone pot and see if that helps, but it would be good to know what you are expecting. These tone stacks are very rudimentary in their design.
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- Brad Bechtel
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This should be in Electronics, not No Peddlers, so I've moved it there.
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- Blake Hawkins
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Larry, On an amp that old, I'd replace all the caps and check all the resistors.
There are not a whole lot of parts in a '53 champ so it shouldn't be expensive and you wind up with a reliable, stable, amp.
For safety, you should also replace the old two wire line cord with a modern 3 wire with a 3 prong plug.
Blake<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Blake Hawkins on 17 March 2006 at 12:31 PM.]</p></FONT>
There are not a whole lot of parts in a '53 champ so it shouldn't be expensive and you wind up with a reliable, stable, amp.
For safety, you should also replace the old two wire line cord with a modern 3 wire with a 3 prong plug.
Blake<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Blake Hawkins on 17 March 2006 at 12:31 PM.]</p></FONT>
- Brad Sarno
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Well first of all you just gotta replace the electrolytic caps. I'd start there and then see what you've got happening. Those are surely dried up and bad by now. They were probably bad 25 years ago. That's a pretty simple amp so it shouldn't be too hard to get it up and running, as long as the transformers are working.
Brad
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- Blake Hawkins
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Hehe...I was really puzzling at first - since early champ amps don't HAVE tone controls!
As far as the guitar, it's either a bad cap or some crossed-up wiring. there's usually only one cap, so that's where I'd start. I seem to recall a ,047uf as the usual value. A .022 rolls off less trble; a .1 rols off a lot more, almost acting like a volume control. The existing one could be bad, either drifting or shorting. Either could make it act somewhat like a volume control.
Seems like this ought to b ioved *again* - to "no peddlers"...<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Jim Sliff on 18 March 2006 at 07:46 AM.]</p></FONT>
As far as the guitar, it's either a bad cap or some crossed-up wiring. there's usually only one cap, so that's where I'd start. I seem to recall a ,047uf as the usual value. A .022 rolls off less trble; a .1 rols off a lot more, almost acting like a volume control. The existing one could be bad, either drifting or shorting. Either could make it act somewhat like a volume control.
Seems like this ought to b ioved *again* - to "no peddlers"...<font size="1" color="#8e236b"><p align="center">[This message was edited by Jim Sliff on 18 March 2006 at 07:46 AM.]</p></FONT>
- Blake Hawkins
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- Brad Sarno
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So now that we know it's a guitar and not an amp. I'd say first, if it's wired correctly, then it's possible that the tone cap is shorted internally causing the tone control to act like a volume control because it's grounding the entire signal instead of just the high frequencies. Or it's wired wrong.
Brad
Brad
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I tried a cap that works...same dang thing. I got a picture of the wiring harness for this model and it is wired correctly. I chcked all the connects and resoldered them if needed. I'm no electronics type but heck, it don't get much simpler than this. Maybe the pot? But wouldn't it not work at all if it was that? It still acts like volume. Thanks for the input. Larry
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My money's on the pickup coil, when pickups go bad they lose bass frequencys. As the tone knob cuts treble, when you turn it down you lose volume. Should be able to get it rewound quite cheaply. (if thats the problem)
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