Dr Tony Balls wrote: Tue Jul 15, 2025 8:55 am
Two reasons:
1. SS amps are different beasts. They are different and generally more complicated circuits than tube amps and one needs to build up an experience level before they can competently work on them. Its not just amps is amps, ya know?
2. Many, maybe most, of them arent worth fixing. Or at least arent worth it at a business level.
Yeah, I came to post basically the same thing. Ironically (and generally), the more "vintage" the amp, the easier it is to repair and to find replacement parts. When an old Fender amp breaks, replacing a part might take 15 minutes.
Solid State amps from the 70s-90s are medium-hard to repair, but parts are a bit challenging to find. Modern solid state amps and other very cheap SS amps are quite fragile and were built in ways that they sometimes get destroyed if you try to take them apart.
Also, as someone who wants to make a reasonable living and run a sustaining business, a three hour SS amp repair might cost $300-$400 (parts, labor, business overhead, etc). So, even if I could fix a broken Randall Switchmaster, will my client pay $400? And I'm also taking the risk that just by opening up the amp that I might break something else.
When I was doing amp repair for money like 20-25 years ago, I would look at most anything, but probably would politely decline about 1/3rd of the work and refer them to someone else. For instance, I never worked on the St. Louis Music (Crate) Ampeg amps.