Peavey Rage 158 hum when switched off
Peavey Rage 158 hum when switched off
I have a Peavey Rage 158 which makes a humming noise when plugged in to the power socket at the wall but with the amp actually switched off. Any ideas what could be causing the hum and how to fix it? Suspect it must be something to do with the power cable or a resistor or something. Just odd that the amp is not even turned on.
- studiodtk5
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Re: Peavey Rage 158 hum when switched off
That is a very odd issue.
Are you certain that the hum sound is from the amp?
I suspect that something may be wrong in the switch. I have not taken one of those apart, but it is a push in/out action for ON/OFF. Maybe something in there is not fulling disengaging.
Does this hum go away when the amp is actually ON?
Are you certain that the hum sound is from the amp?
I suspect that something may be wrong in the switch. I have not taken one of those apart, but it is a push in/out action for ON/OFF. Maybe something in there is not fulling disengaging.
Does this hum go away when the amp is actually ON?
Darren
ITOC: 08-00190
Peavey stuff I have: Masterpiece 50, Custom Shop 212, Stereo Chorus 212, T-60, T-40, Signature Select, Odyssey II Prototype, Generation Custom EXP, Firenza P90-ACM, VB-2, Stomp Boxes, Radial Pro 1000, lots of mics, etc...
ITOC: 08-00190
Peavey stuff I have: Masterpiece 50, Custom Shop 212, Stereo Chorus 212, T-60, T-40, Signature Select, Odyssey II Prototype, Generation Custom EXP, Firenza P90-ACM, VB-2, Stomp Boxes, Radial Pro 1000, lots of mics, etc...
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- Joined: Sat Sep 12, 2009 4:23 am
Re: Peavey Rage 158 hum when switched off
If there is hum when the power switch is turned on can you plug in and play the amp in the off position?
What about when you unplug it from the wall -- any hum then?
What about when you unplug it from the wall -- any hum then?
Re: Peavey Rage 158 hum when switched off
The circuit diagram clearly places the power switch after the mains transformer. This puts less strain on the power switch and more on your utility bill. The hum will be mechanical hum (120Hz) from the transformer. Meaning that short of swapping the transformer, solutions will be mechanical and focus on isolating/dampening/stopping the vibration.
Unless the hum is loud enough to annoy you when playing, the cleanest solution likely is using a switchable mains socket/plug instead of the secondary power switch in the Rage 158.
Unless the hum is loud enough to annoy you when playing, the cleanest solution likely is using a switchable mains socket/plug instead of the secondary power switch in the Rage 158.