196 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
196 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2759
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Title: HPR2759: Cleaning the Potentiometers on a Peavey Bandit 65
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2759/hpr2759.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 16:26:51
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---
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This is HBR episode 2007 159 entitled Cleaning the Potentiometer on a Beavey Bandit 65.
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It is hosted by John Kulp and is about 21 minutes long and carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, I disassemble and clean the pots on my Beavey Bandit 65 to fix static in the knob.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hey everybody, this is John Kulp in Lafayette, Louisiana and I wasn't really
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planning on doing an HBR episode today, but I thought what the heck I might as well,
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because I was about to start on something that might be of interest to hackers.
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I have here an old guitar amplifier. This is a PV bandit 65 that I got new in about 1986 or so.
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At the time, it was a decent amp, not a great amp. It's solid state, so it's not a two-bamp,
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which is for electric guitar players, two-bamplifiers are normally the ones that they really want,
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but they cost a lot more, at least they did at the time.
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The reason I'm going to work on it today is to try to get rid of some of the static in the
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potentiometers, also known as pots. Also, I was really hoping, just by cleaning it up a little,
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I might make the saturation work again. Those of you unfamiliar with PV guitar amps of the 80s,
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the saturation knob is the one that gave you distortion. I got this amp out again recently,
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because my daughter was interested in playing my guitar and I hadn't played it in ages. The amp
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had not really been used in 20 or 30 years, and it seems like the saturation doesn't work. I'm
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not getting any kind of distortion anymore, and so I don't know if cleaning is going to fix it,
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but that's always the first step. I watched a video earlier today on how to clean the pots on these
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things, which is a little different than the way I had done before. I think I tried cleaning them
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before by just pulling the knob off and then spraying contact cleaner in there from the front,
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and then putting the knob back on. That might have helped a little bit. Some of the knobs are kind
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of sticky. Even if they're not making static, they're a little sticky. I'm going to turn the amp on
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now without a guitar plugged in. You might be able to hear the reverb. I guess I have the reverb
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switched on. I left the foot switch downstairs so I can't switch it back off.
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The lead gain knob turns it up where you can probably hear that. That's just like the sound of
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nothing. I'm turning the saturation knob now. It's very tight and sticky. There's the post gain.
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You can hear it's got static. The normal gain, let's see.
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On the equalizer, low range seems not static, but it's very sticky. Mid-range turns pretty well.
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High turns really well. It pulls just fine. No static. There's a presence knob. I'm not sure what
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I have to get the manual out again to understand what some of these things are supposed to do. The
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master reverb also is kind of static. I'm hoping by cleaning these out that I can get rid of the
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static. I'm going to turn it back off now. I'm going to turn the amp around a little bit this way.
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I think I'll take a couple of pictures while I'm at this. The band at 65 is a classic amp.
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From what I was reading online today, you can still get. If you want to buy a band at 65 from
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the mid-80s, you might end up paying a couple hundred bucks, which seems like a lot for a 35-30
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some-year-old amp, but maybe it's because it holds its value. Here's a picture from the front.
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And I'll take a picture from the back. I was going to take a picture from the back anyway to make
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sure I got the speaker wires back on in the right order. I see here that I bought this amplifier
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at Tuskyl and Music Incorporated. I remember the store very well. That was on No One's Feel Road in
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Nashville, Tennessee. And I remember Mr. Richard the owner and also the guitar instructor that I
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studied with was named Richard. Got named Richard Downs. He was a very successful studio musician in
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Nashville. And he is one of the people who I credit with getting me on my way to being ready to
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study guitar in college and eventually have a career in music. So I have very fond memories of
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Tuskyl and Music. And I don't know if it's still there or not. It'd be nice if it were, but I guess
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one doesn't know these things. So the first thing I'm going to do is there's a connector for the
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reverb panel up here that I need to pull off ever so gently. Is there any clips or anything? I don't
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I don't feel any clips. Oh, there it comes. Okay, I got it off. So the reverb is disconnected.
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All right, now I need to disconnect the speaker wires. Yellow on the left and blue on the right.
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Okay, there's one. I don't think these have ever been taken off the speaker.
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Okay, both of them are off now. I was harder than I wanted it to be. All right, so I've disconnected
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everything. And now what I need to do is get the circuitry part out. And so to do that, I have to
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undo four screws on the top of the amp. I'll try to take a picture of this as well.
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Okay, taking these screws out. I did the same operation just a little while ago on another amplifier I
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have that is much less valuable to me. It's a little audition chorus, chorus audition or something.
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It's another PB amp, but I got it at Goodwill for 13 bucks, not that long ago.
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And so I thought I would try it on that first. And it seemed to go, okay, I'm not sure it helped
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a whole lot. I didn't take a lot of time testing beforehand to see which knobs were static in which
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ones weren't. So the guy recommended not to take all of these out all the way, but to loosen them almost
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all the way. And then just be sure to support the thing so it doesn't go falling down. Okay,
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it's wedged in there pretty tight. So I don't think it's going to fall. All right, it's
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the screws are all out. Oh, this is quite come out easier than the last one did. I'm gently pulling
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from the back and pushing from the front to try to get the brains of this thing out. Okay, it's loose now.
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This must be exciting to listen to. Is there another screw hook? No, there's not.
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That's definitely all the screws. It's just wedged in there nice and snug, which you want. I mean,
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this is a build quality thing. One of the things that the guy in the video I watched pointed out was
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that these amps were all made in the United States in Meridian, Mississippi. In fact, I've seen the
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PV factory there when you drive through Meridian, which we do with some regularity because that's
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halfway between Lafayette, Louisiana, and where my parents live up in middle Tennessee.
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And also when you fly in the old days, when you flew from Lafayette, Louisiana to Atlanta on one of
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those propeller planes, you had to make a stop in Meridian, Mississippi to pick up usually military
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folks because there's a base there. But you could see the PV factory from the runway. That always
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used to please me. Ah, there we go. There we go. One of the screws was still just a little bit
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as an outsliding right out. Okay, good deal. There we go. Okay, the circuitry is out now.
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So what I'm going to be doing is taking some contact cleaner and spraying it into each of the
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potentiometers or pots and then vigorously moving the pot back and forth. And if it's got a pull
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mechanism pulling that out and just making sure it gets all around in there real good.
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So spraying some cleaner.
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Some of these have little holes at the bottom where the guy on the other video is I'm going to put
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this on its face, I think. Work and get it these holes a little easier. I'm going to do the next one now.
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This contact cleaner is meant to evaporate. I can feel that loosening up already. That was one of the
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tight ones. That one is definitely loosening up a bit. Maybe I'll pull this knob off.
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These kind of knobs you can pull them straight off. And then I'm going to spray from the front side.
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Put them all back on. I made sure to have the indicator pointing exactly up at the five before
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I took it off. So I know where it went back. I'm going to push it back on and then go back with the
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back and forth motion.
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You can definitely feel these things loosening up once the cleaner gets in there.
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Hopefully that means they will move freely. Which one of these was saturation? It was that
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second one I did. That still feels a little bit tight. It's better, but let's try a little bit more in there.
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Go down to this one. Got a few more of these to do.
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There's a very sticky one.
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Loosened up considerably with some lubrication. That's because it's not lubrication. It's just cleaner.
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One of these things needs lubrication as well. Again, the video said not to put any WD-40 or anything
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like that on them. So I'm not doing that. It doesn't seem like a good idea to put WD-40 on electronics.
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I guess if all else fails, I could get a distortion pedal if I really want distortion in the amp
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or I could have a professional try to fix the saturation circuit if that's what's wrong with it.
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That one is... that's not the reverb. This was the presence knob. That was pretty sticky as well.
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I'm going to squirt some more down in there.
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Since this stuff evaporates, I don't guess you can really spray too much.
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Now the reverb one. This one's sticky. Yeah, it's very sticky and it's static-y as well.
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Let's put a bunch of contact cleaner in there. It seems to get right down in there.
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Yeah, it loosens right up.
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I guess this could be tested as well. It's still a part like this, but I don't really want to
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plug it in while I've got it all sitting out on the table. It seems like a hazard.
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So I'm not going to do that. Check all these one more time.
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The reverb still seems a little bit sticky. I'll pull that one off and go from the front.
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Saturation still feels sticky. I get the idea that this stuff is not exactly a lubricant.
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It feels a lot freer while it's drying, but then once it's dry, it still feels a little bit sticky again.
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Okay, well, maybe it's time to put it back together.
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I turn the volume ones all the way down to zero, just to avoid any big surprises when I turn the
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thing on. And so what I'll do is I'll gently ease this thing in there and then try to start the
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screws.
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There's so much trick to it. Okay, there we go.
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You can get the first one in. The others should easily follow.
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There we go. That one's starting to thread.
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Three of the four screws are in now and now the fourth one.
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I think I'm going to reattach the speaker where I was before. I put this supporting bar back on.
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I know. Okay, yellow and blue.
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All right. The speaker wires are in place. I'm not going to test this before putting the last
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piece back on because if what I did did not help, then I'm just going to live with it.
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I'm not going to take it back apart and try again. It's not that important to me.
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Just a fun Saturday morning thing to do.
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This makes for good radio, doesn't it? Listening people screw in screws.
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Even better than when you're waiting for people to screw in screws on one of those how-to videos.
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All right, let's give this a try now.
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Go ahead and put on the floor so it reaches the out a little bit easier.
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Well, the reverb pot no longer makes static. That's good.
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Which other one made static, I forget.
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Reverb sounds nice and clean.
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They all sound clean now. I don't hear any static.
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Saturation still feels a little sticky, but should I plug a guitar into it? What do you guys think?
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So now I'm getting out my guitar. This is a 1977 Fender Stratocaster.
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The effects pedal goes on the floor and then you got to plug it into a quarter-inch plug in the back
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of the amp labeled foot switch.
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Good.
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That made a lot of noise when I plugged in the, okay.
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The effect, I guess the effects were switched on on the pedal.
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Okay, now, picture of the guitar.
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Maybe one day I'll tell the story of the provenance of this guitar. It's actually a pretty
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interesting story, but that's for another day. But this is actually an American made Fender too.
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Okay. I've got the guitar around my neck now. I wish I could take a selfie with the
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guitar like this. Then you guys could see me rocking out. Oh man, I forgot to bring a guitar
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pick up here. What a dope. So a little bit of volume on the guitar.
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Do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do. I've never tried to play this hum guitar before.
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Okay, let's see if I get any saturation.
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Yeah, a little bit.
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I can't play the guitar like I used to when I was young because my hands aren't as good anymore.
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I think it might have fixed it.
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Man, this is out of tune.
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Wait, where is it?
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Okay, well, anyway, it seems like the saturation is working now.
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And it wasn't before, so maybe I fixed it.
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I certainly hope so.
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That will make it a lot more fun to rock out if I get some distortion.
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I guess that's probably about it.
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This has been John Culp for Hacker Public Radio.
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And I will talk to you guys again soon, I guess.
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Okay, bye-bye.
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Okay, so after getting my amplifier back downstairs and getting it set up
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and getting the foot pedal pushed in, I kind of realized something.
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I think the reason I was not getting saturation distortion
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before was that somehow my amplifier had gotten stuck on the clean channel.
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And I had forgotten about how the amp operates.
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The foot pedal has two switches on it, one switches on the reverb,
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and the other switches between the effects channel and the clean channel.
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I think it had gotten stuck on the clean channel.
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Of course, if that happens, then no matter what I do to the saturation,
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it doesn't make a difference because that's on the effects channel.
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So anyway, now I know.
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But I think it was still helpful to clean out the pots using the contact cleaner
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because I did get rid of the static that you get when turning them.
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And of course, it's fun to take stuff apart and put it back together.
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So there's that.
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Anyway, that's it for now.
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You've been listening to Heka Public Radio at HekaPublicRadio.org.
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