
toyL
Member
I own a Fender "The Twin" amplifier that recently became even more mysterious than it's "red-knobs" would already indicate. I finally found the time to disassemble it in order to discover the cause of the consistent hiss and hum it had been making over the past few years. Surprisingly, I found an oval shaped hole (.7"x .5") in the power-supply board--right where R302 and R303 should have been located. About 80% of the edge of this hole is badly "burned". The 20% that showed no burning appears to have been "cut", or perhaps somehow cleanly "snapped" off from considerable pressure. I have not yet removed the board for further examination because the hole clearly shows undamaged wires on the solder-side of the board. These undamaged wires run parallel to the board and are less than 1/16th" from the surface, which would seem to indicate that they were installed well after the hole was "created". In other words, at some point "during" production it appears that Fender purposefully added this hole through the board as an "authorized deviation" (this must surely be the case because the amp "works", right?). The wreckless workmanship that dominates the entire elec. assembly of this amp would seem to support my little theory. Furthermore, I have found a bad cap that would explain the noise problem. I could be wrong, but it doesn't make sense that two 1/2-watt resistors could go up in smoke without shutting the amp down. So, who else has found this hole in the power-supply board on their red-knob monster? Please, someone tell me that the hole in the board and the two missing resistors are simply Fender's idea of ingenuity. Thanks.