Hi! First time poster here, and looking forwards to plenty of reading from this forum.
So, here's my story. I've been wanting a tube amp for a long while, and something that doesn't howl like a wounded pig. Granted, Deizels (sp?), 5150s, JCM2000s, and Triple Rectified hold a certain fascination to me, but I think I lost the need of that sort of tone a few years ago. I discovered the Tweed, and through vigilant studying, found that the "mild" sort of tone that I like was also one of the simpler amps to build, so to speak. Not a lot of parts, no circuit boards to acid-dip, etc.
Fast forward to today. I traded a piece of MIDI equipment that didn't work on my stupid Vista machine (don't buy Akai) for a weird old tube amp from an organ. I immediately started salivating a'la Pavlov's dog, and started opening it to look inside.
I didn't touch anything!!!!!
I've been reading enough of this stuff online to know that one of these mysterious firecrackers in there could stop my ticker. I dunno which one, exactly..
Anyway. So here's what I have, and here's what I want. A Wurlitzer 420 power amp for a Leslie-style speaker. It's got 2 nice clean 7025a power tubes, a 12au7 tube that's probably the phase inverter, and a 7199 tube that sits in front of the "stack", along with a 5u4ga rectifier tube. There's a sort of normal sized output transformer, and a gigantic power transformer (I'm assuming that because the rectifier tube is sitting right in front of it). A couple of those tall twist-on capacitors from Sprague sit on top, and a whole mess of capacitors from RMC and Good-All, Some of which range into 1400 volts.
So, I went to the Fender Field Guide, and searched until I found an amp that had the rectifier tube, and something close to 7025a (which are apparently a quiet version of the 6l6), and came up with the 5e5 and 5e7 amps. Therefore...here I go.
So, my plans! I would like to end up with a Pro/Bandmaster with an effects loop, and the ability to switch between one or the other speaker, as I would like to put in a standard magnet speaker and an AlNiCo one. I don't really want it to look like a Bandmaster or Pro as I'm sort of scratch-building it. I'm thinking a nice "woodie" combo.
Here comes the fun part. I have no clue what I'm doing with electronics. I do know that caps will kill me if they get the chance, and to never lick the battery out of your laptop (a friend demo'd this little activity). So, I DLed the schematic of the 5e5, and the chassis layout. Looks kind of like connect the dots, only with solder. I understand there's a lot of checking that goes into an undertaking like this, which includes a check of the non-tube parts before I blow anything important up.
Also, I should look for a source of the parts I need. Does anyone know if the 7025a power tube is a decent trade for a pair of 6l6gc? How about a 7199? I've read that both of these are more suited to the Hi-Fi crowd...
Anyway...there's my story. I need to learn how to desolder, and get my ducks in a row. There's about twice as many parts in this Wurlitzer organ than there are in a Bandmaster, so I'm hoping I'll get the lucky.
Thanks for letting my air my laundry!
So, here's my story. I've been wanting a tube amp for a long while, and something that doesn't howl like a wounded pig. Granted, Deizels (sp?), 5150s, JCM2000s, and Triple Rectified hold a certain fascination to me, but I think I lost the need of that sort of tone a few years ago. I discovered the Tweed, and through vigilant studying, found that the "mild" sort of tone that I like was also one of the simpler amps to build, so to speak. Not a lot of parts, no circuit boards to acid-dip, etc.
Fast forward to today. I traded a piece of MIDI equipment that didn't work on my stupid Vista machine (don't buy Akai) for a weird old tube amp from an organ. I immediately started salivating a'la Pavlov's dog, and started opening it to look inside.
I didn't touch anything!!!!!
I've been reading enough of this stuff online to know that one of these mysterious firecrackers in there could stop my ticker. I dunno which one, exactly..
Anyway. So here's what I have, and here's what I want. A Wurlitzer 420 power amp for a Leslie-style speaker. It's got 2 nice clean 7025a power tubes, a 12au7 tube that's probably the phase inverter, and a 7199 tube that sits in front of the "stack", along with a 5u4ga rectifier tube. There's a sort of normal sized output transformer, and a gigantic power transformer (I'm assuming that because the rectifier tube is sitting right in front of it). A couple of those tall twist-on capacitors from Sprague sit on top, and a whole mess of capacitors from RMC and Good-All, Some of which range into 1400 volts.
So, I went to the Fender Field Guide, and searched until I found an amp that had the rectifier tube, and something close to 7025a (which are apparently a quiet version of the 6l6), and came up with the 5e5 and 5e7 amps. Therefore...here I go.
So, my plans! I would like to end up with a Pro/Bandmaster with an effects loop, and the ability to switch between one or the other speaker, as I would like to put in a standard magnet speaker and an AlNiCo one. I don't really want it to look like a Bandmaster or Pro as I'm sort of scratch-building it. I'm thinking a nice "woodie" combo.
Here comes the fun part. I have no clue what I'm doing with electronics. I do know that caps will kill me if they get the chance, and to never lick the battery out of your laptop (a friend demo'd this little activity). So, I DLed the schematic of the 5e5, and the chassis layout. Looks kind of like connect the dots, only with solder. I understand there's a lot of checking that goes into an undertaking like this, which includes a check of the non-tube parts before I blow anything important up.
Also, I should look for a source of the parts I need. Does anyone know if the 7025a power tube is a decent trade for a pair of 6l6gc? How about a 7199? I've read that both of these are more suited to the Hi-Fi crowd...
Anyway...there's my story. I need to learn how to desolder, and get my ducks in a row. There's about twice as many parts in this Wurlitzer organ than there are in a Bandmaster, so I'm hoping I'll get the lucky.
Thanks for letting my air my laundry!
Comment