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RI fender reverb unit >> eyelet board re-wire
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Okay... well I walked to home depot on my lunch break. Bought a pair of snips and a sheet of zinc. measured, clipped, and folded it (using my desk drawer at the office) in 10 minutes.
Cost less than any available "doghouse" and I get to keep the snips!
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So. I finished my project.
I ended up replacing the aerovox caps with some Mallorys from watts tube audio. But I re-wrapped them in a retro design I cooked up since new mallorys look so boring.
Here are all the photos of my rebuild process. Thanks for looking and for your help along the way.
Only one issue left to deal with. The Dwell knob seems to be faulty, or fried. When I turn the dwell to zero I get a sustained BUZZ. Otherwise it sounds really great without any unwanted noise.
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Wow!! That looks great!
I am really interested to hear how you like the results of your reverb. My guess is that you are very happy with the sound from your build. I have an original Fender reverb from the '60s and I recently built as close a clone as possible. They sound different. I can cross the leads to the reverb pans and that does not change the difference in the sound. Swapping tubes has no effect. There is still a difference in the sound of the original and the clone played through the same amp (1961 Fender Bandmaster - blonde on oxblood cloth with 12" speaker and tone-ring). I have grown up with the sound of the original for 40+ years and that certainly introduces a major league bias in my listening.
I would love to be able to create the original sound to share with everyone, but there is some sort of "mojo" about the old parts.
For what it's worth (probably not a lot!!!) my 40+ year old gear sounds the same to me today as it did way back in the good old days when I was a budding rock and roll star. The "exact" clone does not have the same sound.
Also for what it's worth, I am not chasing some elusive sound from a legendary player on a specific track. I am making an A versus B comparison and with NO changes in the components in the circuit there is a major difference in the sound.
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Did you just swap tanks between the two units or did you allow one unit to drive the tank and recovery circuit in the other unit? You would have to drive both units in parallel and select the output to feed the amp. That would narrow it down as to whether the mojo is on the drive side or the recovery side.WARNING! Musical Instrument amplifiers contain lethal voltages and can retain them even when unplugged. Refer service to qualified personnel.
REMEMBER: Everybody knows that smokin' ain't allowed in school !
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Originally posted by loudthud View PostDid you just swap tanks between the two units or did you allow one unit to drive the tank and recovery circuit in the other unit? You would have to drive both units in parallel and select the output to feed the amp. That would narrow it down as to whether the mojo is on the drive side or the recovery side.
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