Hi there-
I had this posted in the 'mods' section, but this area seems more appropriate. I'm interested in people's feedback.
I am not new to tube amps, but I'm new to this forum.
Hopefully this is the appropriate forum to put this in, since I'm sort of looking to modify it.
I have more than a few vintage Fenders, and a 50W Marshall, but I have been getting more and more interested in small amps, which seem to be a lot of fun.
One of my favorites is a small Supro I have, which has only two tubes, a 50L6 and a 12AX7, connected in a power transformerless death arrangement. I figure it's safe enough for the living room.
I recently acquired an old RCA amplifier. It's some sort of portable PA amp, and other than having an oddball input transformer (shown in the schematic) that had to be removed, the amp sounds pretty good right out of the box, plugged into my 4x10 slant cab. It's a little dark, which is what I'd like to address, but it has it's own very distinct and unique distortion characteristics.
I'm interested to see how people react to the schematic, and what, if anything might be changed to brighten the amp up a little bit. The only thing I've done is eliminated the microphone input transformer (lower left corner of the schematic) and changed the .047 caps between the PI and the output tubes to .015 that I had handy. Still a very dark amp. I've also clipped the wire to the NFB resistor, made almost no change. Any of the 6973 amps that I've seen schematics for (mostly old Valco stuff) don't use any NFB from the speaker output on the power transformer.
The amp is quiet, and is one of the highest quality small amps I've ever seen. The wiring inside is well above average for 60s vintage hand wired and mass produced amps, there's even a common ground bar and the transformers are VERY high quality. This was probably not a cheap unit in it's day. I can't find any info on it, though.
If the photo of the schematic doesn't show up well in the forum, I have the original high res pic that I can email to anyone who is interested in seeing the amp.
Thanks in advance for suggestions, this looks like a pretty knowledgeable bunch of people!
I had this posted in the 'mods' section, but this area seems more appropriate. I'm interested in people's feedback.
I am not new to tube amps, but I'm new to this forum.
Hopefully this is the appropriate forum to put this in, since I'm sort of looking to modify it.
I have more than a few vintage Fenders, and a 50W Marshall, but I have been getting more and more interested in small amps, which seem to be a lot of fun.
One of my favorites is a small Supro I have, which has only two tubes, a 50L6 and a 12AX7, connected in a power transformerless death arrangement. I figure it's safe enough for the living room.
I recently acquired an old RCA amplifier. It's some sort of portable PA amp, and other than having an oddball input transformer (shown in the schematic) that had to be removed, the amp sounds pretty good right out of the box, plugged into my 4x10 slant cab. It's a little dark, which is what I'd like to address, but it has it's own very distinct and unique distortion characteristics.
I'm interested to see how people react to the schematic, and what, if anything might be changed to brighten the amp up a little bit. The only thing I've done is eliminated the microphone input transformer (lower left corner of the schematic) and changed the .047 caps between the PI and the output tubes to .015 that I had handy. Still a very dark amp. I've also clipped the wire to the NFB resistor, made almost no change. Any of the 6973 amps that I've seen schematics for (mostly old Valco stuff) don't use any NFB from the speaker output on the power transformer.
The amp is quiet, and is one of the highest quality small amps I've ever seen. The wiring inside is well above average for 60s vintage hand wired and mass produced amps, there's even a common ground bar and the transformers are VERY high quality. This was probably not a cheap unit in it's day. I can't find any info on it, though.
If the photo of the schematic doesn't show up well in the forum, I have the original high res pic that I can email to anyone who is interested in seeing the amp.
Thanks in advance for suggestions, this looks like a pretty knowledgeable bunch of people!
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