0 troubleshooting – Hughes & Kettner TRIAMP MK II Benutzerhandbuch

Seite 14

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TriAmp

®

MK II is not getting

any power:

• Check the mains cable to see if it is

connected properly.

• The mains fuse is defective. Replace the fuse

with another identical fuse.

TriAmp

®

MK II is connected properly,

but no sound is audible:

• The amp is set to STANDBY.

• One or several GAIN and MASTER controls are

turned all the way down. Dial in a higher setting.

• The anode fuse is blown. Before you replace the

fuse, examine whether the power amp tubes

are defective.

• The fuse for the tube heater blew (the tubes

don’t glow). Make absolutely certain to check

the rating when replacing this fuse. It is a super-

slo blo TT 15 A fuse. This type of fuse is relatively

uncommon and may be hard to find in your

area. That’s why your TriAmp

®

MK II shipped with

a replacement fuse. Be sure to have a service

technician replace the fuse.

Fuse keeps on blowing:

• After replacing the fuse, with standby off,

turn on the power. Watch the power tubes,

turn standby on. Look for tube “flash” before

fuse blows, indicating excess oxygen within the

tube. This will show which power tube needs to

be replaced.

The FX LOOP is on when

it shouldn’t be:

• The FX LOOP is deactivated when the front

panel button, the Stageboard button and the

MIDI module switching function are off. If any of

these three switches is on, the circuit is active.

The sound is thin and muddy when
the effects processor is active:

• The effect device routes back a dry signal that is

added to the original dry signal in the parallel

effects loop. Depending on the type of em-

ployed effect device, the phase position of the

dry return signal can lead to cancellations when

the return and original signals are mixed. To fix

this problem, switch the effects loop to SERIAL

or turn the dry signal all the way down on the

effect device.

When in use with a loud PA,

the RED BOX

®

DI OUT circuit is causing

feedback even though the amp is set

to a low MASTER volume:

• Speakers connected to a tube amp may have

microphonic properties. Turn TriAmp

®

MK II’s

Master VOLUME up and the circuit will stop

feeding back. In extreme cases of microphonic

speakers, you would either turn the PA down

or mic the cabinet.

Your amp is producing ringing noises

or tends to feedback:

• One or several tubes are microphonic.

Replace the appropriate tube with another

of the same type.

After just a few hours of operation,

your amp is displaying the typical

characteristics of old tubes (increased

microphonics and noise, treble loss,

weak power output, muddy sound).

• You have installed the wrong tubes or the bias is

not adjusted properly. Take the amp to a profes-

sional amp technician to correct the problem.

TRIAMP MK II - MANUAL

14

14

6.0 TROUBLESHOOTING

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