My line 6 amp has
Is it potentially fixable, but probably not worth it. By the time you have paid for spares and an engineer to fix it it would be more than the amp is worth. If it is within warranty then take it back to the shop. It may well have been a fault with the amp.
I seem to always get
It sounds like you have a dirty pot (the volume control). Unfortunately the only way to clean the pot is to open the amp up and try to spray some Servisol Super 10 in through the small opening in the pot case.
WARNING: Tube amps contain lethal voltages even when unplugged! If you are not an experienced service engineer then take it to someone who is! It is a pretty common task in guitar amps so shouldn't cost too much.
I was rehursaling with my
It sounds like the speaker may have gone. I have had the same happen to me in the past. Only option is to replace the speaker I'm afraid!
All the lights on my
Unfortuently for you i can already tell you that is going to be your digital board. notorious for going bad in these things. line 6 has a flat rate to repair them but wont release parts. sorry man i've been fighting that battle since these were released.
My DL4 doesn't sound as it should in my series
your parallel loop only has input, a series has out and in, you need to patch the out of amp to the in of the pedal, and out of the pedal to the in of the amp fx loop. then you need to make sure your loop is turned on, via switch or footpedal.
My sachs roadster will only hit 45 with help from
What this has to do with a guitar amplifier is beyond me, however your symptoms would indicate the bike is starved for fuel as the choke richens the mixture. Recommend a carburator cleaning and rebuild and replace the fuel filters which should be done first.
Sorry for my terrible english
- So if I understand you right, and I think I do. You are putting the looping on so you can record your own tract but for some reason the amount of time you think you have recorded is not being reflected in listening to the playback correct?
- When you push play then the beat will begin to play. It will continue to play until you stop it. Now while the beat is playing you want to hit "record" to record anything you want to have recorded. If you hit the record button again then this will pause what you are recording BUT you will continue to hear the loop. This allows you to choose different parts of the loop to lay a chop down on. So in other words if you press play (this allows the selected loop to being) then you press record to record everything. If you press record again while the loop is playing this will stop ALL recording but you will still hear the selected loop playing. You have to press record again to continue recording.
- Also remember that if you have somehow reached 24 minutes of recording then you have to remove it to make room for more recording. You do this by hitting the "undu" button.
- Hope this helps and thank you for using FixYa.
Regards,
Tony
Line 6 Toneport KB37 Phones
You will probably have to go to Line 6 to get a schematic... HOWEVER, it is likely a visual inspection will reveal the failure due to dropping. Look first for bad solder at the headphone jack. Next under a bright light look for circuit board cracks. This is going to be surface mounted parts and unless you have an equiped shop, it is not likely you can successfully work on the board if it is not a visible problem.
I'm experiencing humming/hissing when my
Hi,
Welcome to Fixya. It seems that there is a static on the device when it receives power. You can try to use a different power cable and see if that is the cause of the issue or the problem is caused bya bad system board of the device. This can be a hardware issue but we need to verify it first by doing the steps below.
Thanks for using Fixya
With my flextone III on
If it has 2 fuses, the second one might be blown. Try replacing the fuses, if its not that then there is a problem with the amp and you will probably need to take it for repairs.
I bought a Line6 M13
The PX-2 should work fine as long as you are on 120 or 110 volt service. If you have 220 volt power, you have done damage... likely to the PX-2 and probably to the power input circuits of the M13.
If you are on 220, then you need to use a TRANSFORMER type voltage reducer before going to the PX-2. If you are on 220, then replace the PX-2 and take the M13 in for service replacement of parts where the power comes in and is regulated.
2009 212 40 watt mk2
"Mother board went out" is a statement of a tech that is incapable of troubleshooting things to the component level. Most common things are broken pots and connectors. There is nothing common to cause a "motherboard to go out". You should find a tech capable of analyzing the problem that has proper test equipment and skill to repair the unit. There is likely a part with cost less than $2 that has failed. Common problems include: broken connectors, broken pots, circuit board cracks, Bad solder connections. Bad solder and bad jacks are most common with bad pots third in line. Bad electrolytic caps are next in line.
Whenever I play the guitar
More than likely your cable is old and should be replaced. Monster cables are a bit more expensive but come with a life time warranty, check em out. If the cable replacement doesn't work, check the sound card. Make shire it is not loose, or full of dust. It may be the sound card is old and needs to be replaced. Another option is the guitar itself. Try plugging it into an amp to make sure it doesn't pop. If it does the same on the amp, you have a problem with your pick ups or the cable connection to the guitar. Hope that helps.
I have a Line 6
It is NOT likely that any significant damage was done to the amp. Find a COMPETENT tech that knows how to fix, rather than replace boards.
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