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~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Sun Nov 11, 2018 12:32 am
by thedudear
Hey all, just got my OR-80 that I purchased over the summer back from my tech.

A myriad of issues with it (mostly) sorted out, I'm looking to get some input on dating this thing. It was sold as a 72' OR-80. Looking at the Orange Field Guide, that seems to match up.

I'm still not quite sure it's working correctly... it's super "farty" when you're not absolutely diming it, and if you do dime the amp, it squeals, even if the guitar volume is rolled down all the way.

S/N is 80035, but I read that serial numbers don't mean much. I was hoping it meant it was the 35th unit of the OR80 series >_>

The knobs are not original, i'm working on a fix for that. Ordered some new ones from Orange directly but theyre the wrong spindle size.

The OT is replaced with a Toneclone, any opinions on these?

There was a bunch of issues with the amp, a severed trace in the feedback loop, a bad bias mod (was running the tubes lean), some incorrect resistor values were all contributing to an amplifier that was totally unplayable. All sold as a "fine, working condition amp" :shock:

Link to the OR80 photos: https://imgur.com/a/8D8yYXp

Cheers guys and gals

Nick

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Sun Nov 11, 2018 4:08 pm
by LD50
The external shots I can see are not particularly helpful re working issues!

The squeal is parasitic oscillation (poor wire routing - or more commonly a missing internal shield from the inputs.

We cannot be sure what your tech did. It should be pretty clean and crisp up to half volume even with humbuckers.

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2018 3:14 am
by thedudear
Hey LD50, Ill get some internal shots soon enough. I also suspected parasitic oscillation, but my tech was unable to reproduce this. Is this a problem that could react differently with a resistive dummy load? It's puzzling since its such an obvious problem, turn the volume up, the amp output clicks and dies (at least in the audible frequency range). ???

I might take it into my own hands and tool up here for some diagnostics. I have a history of working with high voltages and electronics, but I have faint knowledge on how tube amps work. It will take some studying.

Cheers,

Nick

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2018 2:03 pm
by LD50
thedudear wrote:
Mon Nov 12, 2018 3:14 am

Is this a problem that could react differently with a resistive dummy load? It's puzzling since its such an obvious problem, turn the volume up, the amp output clicks and dies (at least in the audible frequency range). ???
Cheers,

Nick
Yes, classical PO
Is the shield present inside (a lot turn up with them missing!)?
Some amps use an aluminium shield to cover the bottom of the amp creating a 'Faraday' cage.
Some amps only do this when the amp is out of the head cab and the guts are exposed!
Decent hi res pics (global and close ups of the inputs) will probably be helpful.

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Sun Apr 07, 2019 11:49 pm
by thedudear
Hey Guys,

I just got back from a 3 month holiday in SE Asia, sorry for the late response.

Feeling slightly rejuvenated, I disassembled the OR80 again and took some photos.

The album is here: https://imgur.com/a/XJxNTgK

I haven't learned much about it since then, my tech handed it back and said it was fine, it definitely doesn't sound or behave fine. The only thing I learned from his look-through was that it had been molested. Just how much, who knows, maybe ya'll can tell by the photos. :D

Thanks all

Nick

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Tue Apr 09, 2019 8:28 pm
by LD50
I see relatively little original in there at all, from the output transformer, caps, most of the resistors etc all replaced. Obviously had a really hard life.
One of the nicest Oranges I worked on (about 2 years ago)was a Pix only 120, the last Pix only a couple of months ago was not quite as sweet (brighter, slightly harsh - might have been the tubes?).Image

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Tue Apr 09, 2019 8:30 pm
by LD50
I see relatively little original in there at all, from the output transformer, caps, most of the resistors etc all replaced. Obviously had a really hard life.
One of the nicest Oranges I worked on (about 2 years ago)was a Pix only 120, the last Pix only a couple of months ago was not quite as sweet (brighter, slightly harsh - might have been the tubes?).
Image

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Tue Apr 09, 2019 8:32 pm
by LD50
Image

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2019 1:50 am
by thedudear
Thanks for the insight LD50.

Accepting that this thing has had a hard life, how should I move forward to getting it back to original glory? Even knowing what it's state is, I'm not ready to give up on it. I'd like to have this amp in my collection. Are there any techs you know who could perform a restoration?

Do you have any thoughts on replacement Mercury magnetics OT's vs the originals?

I appreciate your help LD50.

PS if this isn't the section for this discussion i'm sorry, maybe a mod can move it to the appropriate area.

Nick

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Mon Apr 15, 2019 8:37 pm
by LD50
If you are in the US there is a guy I know in Texas that is pretty hot on these.

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Fri Apr 23, 2021 1:27 am
by thedudear
LD50 wrote:
Tue Apr 09, 2019 8:32 pm
Image
Hey LD50, I'm doing a complete rebuild of my OR80. Does the pair of green transformer wires in the bottom right of the image go to the ground? I'm having trouble identifying these on any schematic and I'm not sure it was wired correctly when I got it. Just double-checking, your image appears to confirm my suspicion that this transformer connection is a ground.

Cheers!

Nick

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Sat May 08, 2021 6:32 am
by LD50
Sorry for late reply, yes there is a star ground system on these for the power supply, one of which includes the electrostatic screen from the PT.

Re: ~1972 Orange OR-80

Posted: Thu Jun 10, 2021 1:54 am
by thedudear
LD50 wrote:
Sat May 08, 2021 6:32 am
Sorry for late reply, yes there is a star ground system on these for the power supply, one of which includes the electrostatic screen from the PT.
So the "SCR" tap is an electrostatic screen for the power transformer, I wasn't aware. Thanks, that's very valuable info and might be the last unidentified source of hum in this build. If the -ve of the filter caps is grounded "upstream" of this connection it could introduce 60hz into the signal path. I will rework this the next time I break into it.