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The following was submitted by BobSchleicher to the OriginalHammondLeslieFaq.
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-The presence of a motorboating or chopping sound in the [Vibrato] can be an indication that one or more pole pieces of the [Scanner] have been shorted out. The likely culprit is a crystalline growth that can occur on the plated and metal composing the scanner housing (CadmiumDendrites
). This shows up as conductive whiskers or dust between the scanner body and the poles of the scanner. High humidity and temperature is said to aggravate dendrite formation. An over-oiled scanner can also cause vibrato motorboating, though it is probably an aggravating condition to the dendrite formation. The oil coats the insulators and picks up and retains conductive dust and debris, shorting out the stators.
+The presence of a motorboating or chopping sound in the [Vibrato] can be an indication that one or more pole pieces of the [Scanner] have been shorted out. The likely culprit is a crystalline growth that can occur on the plated and metal composing the scanner housing (ZincDendrites
). This shows up as conductive whiskers or dust between the scanner body and the poles of the scanner. High humidity and temperature is said to aggravate dendrite formation. An over-oiled scanner can also cause vibrato motorboating, though it is probably an aggravating condition to the dendrite formation. The oil coats the insulators and picks up and retains conductive dust and debris, shorting out the stators.
A ''Hammond technical bulletin'' was issued detailing corrective procedures to cure this condition. What follows is a shortened version of it:
''Before you condemn the scanner'', be sure the rightmost [6AU6] is healthy. Swap with the other one to verify. If you still have the problem, measure the plate and screen voltage on V2. They should measure about 130VDC and 60VDC respectively. Plus or minus 15% is O.K. If the problem persists proceed as follows: