I have a Marshall G100R CD Amp, and I appear to have blown one or more fuses. My question is what is the best, and easiest way to gain access to the fuses in my amplifier?
You said, the best and easiest way. Since a blown fuse indicates a short, your amp will blow as many fuses as you put in it, until you remove the short. If it appears that you blew fuses, the main amp would appear to be the cause of the short. The best and easiest way to solve the problem is to take it to the Marshall dealer or an electronics repair shop. In the future, do not connect or disconnect speakers with the power turned on, and don't connect more speakers than the manufacturer recommends. The AC input fuse is inside, very near the end of the AC cord. If the glass is discolored, the fuse link inside the little fuse exploded. If it went out that violently and you replace it without repairing the short, you will get to see it blow again. The reason the fuse is inside is because in the brief second that it takes for the fuse to go out additional damage can be done in the world of solid state electronics. That's since 1972,
Answers & Comments
You said, the best and easiest way.
Since a blown fuse indicates a short, your amp will blow as many fuses as you put in it, until you remove the short.
If it appears that you blew fuses, the main amp would appear to be the cause of the short. The best and easiest way to solve the problem is to take it to the Marshall dealer or an electronics repair shop. In the future, do not connect or disconnect speakers with the power turned on, and don't connect more speakers than the manufacturer recommends. The AC input fuse is inside, very near the end of the AC cord. If the glass is discolored, the fuse link inside the little fuse exploded. If it went out that violently and you replace it without repairing the short, you will get to see it blow again. The reason the fuse is inside is because in the brief second that it takes for the fuse to go out additional damage can be done in the world of solid state electronics. That's since 1972,