Something in the upper back of my range has started making a continuous noise. It sounds like something is "stuck" like a motor that won't kick in. It has an electronic ignition and all burners and over light as normal, but the noise never stops. Didn't know there were any motors or anything on it to cause this noise. Help, what is going on and is it dangerous since it is a gas stove?
SOURCE: my Orange amp recently stopped working, as in no sound
Likely the power amp section has had a failure. There are likely several bad components and it will take an experienced electronics person to weed out all the bad parts.
The light has little to do with the condition of the unit. It MAY only indicate that power switch is on or that one of several voltages from a power supply is present.
SOURCE: i have a line-6 spider 30 amp that started humming
output caps. dont beat up your amp. crazy
yostamplifier.com
SOURCE: lowrey catillion organ with loud static noise
Try posting on the organforum.com.
It sounds like the power amp has a problem. Probably filter capacitors have gone bad.
SOURCE: my package came with a behringer ac108 amp. The
just check for damage capacitor, specially electrolytic capacitor near the rectifying diodes... or check the grounding....
SOURCE: Hi, My Aria AS-690B Sinsonido has
First thing is to check that batteries are good. Next, verify your guitar cable is a good one... some are microphonic and the cable can actually insert noise into the signal. The plugs on cables can sometimes be noisy as they move while playing. Try to keep the guitar from "hearing" the amp as it can create feedback. Verify the amp itself isn't the source of the noise. Try a different guitar. The input of the amp is grounded by a contact when cable is removed, If there is a problem right in the input stage it can be masked. Plug only the guitar cable into the amp... Is ti quiet? If so make sure to try the first few suggestions. ALso be aware of other noise producers like fluorescent lights an dimmers... these generate electrical noise that sensitive guitars can pick up.
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