Mesa Bass 400 - Blown from Speaker Cable Not Plugged In Fully

MikeBoneman

MikeBoneman

New member
Hello, I accidentally blew my Bass 400. I plugged things in, warmed up at a low volume. Few minutes into first song there was a spark and burnt smell. I realized what had happened, speaker cable was not 100% pushed into my cab.

I examined and saw a blast mark around a resistor (100 ohm I believe) near the second power tube, resistor broke in half when touched. This resistor seems connected to the wire connecting to R311 which got burned off and was hanging loose. My understanding based on a little research is this is related to the heater circuit. Fuse was still intact but had burns on the glass. The board didnt look scorched anywhere else with a visual.

Based on other pics, it appears that half the caps on this were replaced with some gray ones.

I will probably need to take this to a tech but loathe to think about the potential costs! Any thoughts on what could be wrong? I can fix a resistor and probably reconnect to 311, and replace some tubes. I have access to repair and testing tools but anything beyond a little soldering is probably out of my league.

Any thoughts on the possible collateral damage (for example, could all tubes get blown by this?) or insights on what could have happened under the circumstances (like if speaker wasnt fully plugged in, would it cause power tubes to overheat and maybe short the circuit?).
 

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R311 and R312 are 100 ohm resistors for the artificial center tap on the heater circuit. The fact that one is blown, and appears to be a 2 watt resistor, indicates that likely one or more tubes are shorted to a filament. The resistor blew and hopefully protected a transformer winding.

That amp needs a tech to go through it and:
1. Test all the tubes
2. Test the remaining center tap resistor (or just change them both out).
3. Test the screen grid resistors
4. Test the control grid resistors
5. Test both the power and output transformers
6. Test all the electrolytic caps (and likely replace them all). The Blue Mesa/Sprauges are 38 years old according to the date codes stamped on them.

That amp is probably overdue for a servicing. It won’t be cheap. I’d send it back to Mesa because they will fix it 100%. I would guess it will cost around $400 provided the power and output transformers are not blown.
 
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