MOV
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
- geetarpicker
- Posts: 918
- Joined: Sat Mar 12, 2005 8:08 pm
- Location: Nashville, TN
- Contact:
Re: MOV
If I recall correctly the stock value for the MOV in a wreck is 130 volt. The MOV is tied across the AC line at the power switch. IF the incoming voltage exceeds 130 volts, the MOV will go dead short which in turn will take out the fuse totally shutting down the amp at that point. The idea is the MOV will strike if there is a voltage spike and/or if the voltage coming in is simply past 130 volts. Years ago I had an unfortunate situation where the stage power (USA gig of course) had been incorrectly wired and it was all 240 volts coming out of the 120v outlets. At that gig I lost two Crown power amps who's output stages were then toast and were never the same even after repair. The sound board and other outboard gear had blown fuses but was later fixed 100%. Luckily we figured out the issue before we had turned on the bass or vintage Marshall guitar rigs. Point is an MOV would have saved every piece if they had them. The only downside of an MOV is it only works once, and then you need to put in a new one along with a new fuse. As said before it has no effect on the sound, it's just a safety feature safety of the amp that is.
Re: MOV
I dont understand this. The voltage is ac, so a 125vac supply will peak at 175volts-ish. So shouldnt the mov be 200v, or higher?geetarpicker wrote:If I recall correctly the stock value for the MOV in a wreck is 130 volt. The MOV is tied across the AC line at the power switch. IF the incoming voltage exceeds 130 volts, the MOV will go dead short which in turn will take out the fuse totally shutting down the amp at that point. The idea is the MOV will strike if there is a voltage spike and/or if the voltage coming in is simply past 130 volts.
- leadfootdriver
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Tue Mar 08, 2011 10:32 pm
Re: MOV
I ditched the diode string, and put MOV's on the output transformer leads. They're the 2 mustard colored beads in the pic.
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- LeftyStrat
- Posts: 3117
- Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 6:58 pm
- Location: Marietta, SC, but my heart and two of my kids are in Seattle, WA
Re: MOV
We should get a mod to sticky those. I have them saved, but it's good advice for everyone.M Fowler wrote:Here is some more reading material.
It's never too late to have a happy childhood.
Re: MOV
So datasheets show rms and dc values...surfsup wrote:I dont understand this. The voltage is ac, so a 125vac supply will peak at 175volts-ish. So shouldnt the mov be 200v, or higher?geetarpicker wrote:If I recall correctly the stock value for the MOV in a wreck is 130 volt. The MOV is tied across the AC line at the power switch. IF the incoming voltage exceeds 130 volts, the MOV will go dead short which in turn will take out the fuse totally shutting down the amp at that point. The idea is the MOV will strike if there is a voltage spike and/or if the voltage coming in is simply past 130 volts.
Re: MOV
I'll add them to the sticky "Reading Material on Steroids"LeftyStrat wrote:We should get a mod to sticky those. I have them saved, but it's good advice for everyone.M Fowler wrote:Here is some more reading material.
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hitchcaster
- Posts: 296
- Joined: Thu Jun 01, 2006 12:30 am
Re: MOV
geetarpicker wrote:If I recall correctly the stock value for the MOV in a wreck is 130 volt. The MOV is tied across the AC line at the power switch. IF the incoming voltage exceeds 130 volts, the MOV will go dead short which in turn will take out the fuse totally shutting down the amp at that point. The idea is the MOV will strike if there is a voltage spike and/or if the voltage coming in is simply past 130 volts. Years ago I had an unfortunate situation where the stage power (USA gig of course) had been incorrectly wired and it was all 240 volts coming out of the 120v outlets. At that gig I lost two Crown power amps who's output stages were then toast and were never the same even after repair. The sound board and other outboard gear had blown fuses but was later fixed 100%. Luckily we figured out the issue before we had turned on the bass or vintage Marshall guitar rigs. Point is an MOV would have saved every piece if they had them. The only downside of an MOV is it only works once, and then you need to put in a new one along with a new fuse. As said before it has no effect on the sound, it's just a safety feature safety of the amp that is.
F#@*&!!!! jackass move! sometimes those outdoor stage guys are just retards... thats such a bummer... KF was smart knowing that he can't control all the variables.. what were the power amps for?
to OP, if your building your own amp you can be more safe and maybe take voltage readings at suspect gigs... leave the MOV out, its not a tone secret, and might even sound a hair better without (haven't tested it). maybe get a nice power filter with regulation that tells you the voltage..ive got a furman PF pro and its not the best but its way better then nothing... i had a club where once things starting going the power would dip down to like 90v and sound like shit and put my tubes thru cathode stripping hell