Re: Crackling Sound From AC30
I've never serviced this amp before myself, so I'm a bit clueless what I should and (more importantly) should NOT be touching. I opened up the back panel and found a big-ass circuit board, but no easy way to get at the tubes.
That's because the tubes are BEHIND the circuit board on the back side of the chassis... pointing at the front wall of the amp, above the speakers.
If you look at the bottom of that picture, those four white circles are the power tube sockets. Rectifier tube socket is on the right, same row. Preamp tubes are just above those.
To get at them you need to remove the whole "head" portion. There's four bolts holding it in place, two on each side. Lay the amp on its face (speakers down) and pull those bolts out with a #3 phillips... #2 is too small. Has to be a #3 or you'll strip them. Ask me how I know that... hehe
But yank those four bolts and you'll be able to lift the whole chassis out and gain access to the tubes. There are, IIRC... a half-dozen 12ax7s and one tube is something else... I can't recall... but its for the trem circuit. Not a "standard" tube but not hard to find.
What I'd recommend doing while you troubleshoot the amp is to make a long speaker cable so you can separate the chassis from the cab and facilitate changing tubes easily w/o having to go through the whole mounting/unmounting process because it SUCKS and you'll likely have to do it several times.
Its worth it to replace that stock, crap speaker cable with something heavier in any case. I made the business end of mine long enough that I could feed a different head into the Vox speakers, or mainly... to use an attenuator.
The AC30 is really, really hard on tubes... and if you run yours where I like to run mine (channels jumped, volumes up around 2pm) its even harder! I've heard several techs call the AC30 an easy bake oven for tubes and it really fits.
Noises in these can be notoriously hard to track down... I have the exact same amp and almost every time I've had an issue it was tube related. But I've never had the crackling noise...
How old are the tubes and how hard do you run the thing?
Before you run off to the Shack for contact cleaner, do you have a multi-meter? How about a clip to drain the voltage? 5 or 10 watt resistor, some wire and alligator clips to drain the voltage and make it "safe" to probe around.
Get some chopsticks too...