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5F10 Harvard build

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  • 5F10 Harvard build

    I sold my '58 5F10 a few years ago...but a year or so later, I kinda missed it. But I figured I could always get or build another one and a couple months back I finally decided to build one. I decided to use a blank aluminum chassis which I could drill out myself. I also wanted to use my own layout. The main things that I changed layout-wise were the grounding of the filter caps; they're grounded with the stage that they are supplying. I also decided to add a bias pot. On the cab side, I wanted to go with a slightly larger cab so that it could easily accommodate a 12" speaker if I decided to use one instead of the 10.

    The only difficulty I had was deciding transformers. I wound up going with the Classic Tone 40-18027 pt which as a 550V B+ winding. Loaded, that wound up coming in around 320V...too high. I used a Zener diode mounted on a heat sink to knock it down. Now I'm seeing about 280V on the plates...on the low side, but still within spec. With 100mA current, there's plenty of current on tap compared to the original 70mA transformers. There's no 50V neg bias lead so I did what Fender did with Princetons and took a lead off the 5V winding on pin 4 of the rectifier, then used a 100k resistor in place of the 50k resistor to knock the voltage down. For OT, I'm using the Classic Tone 40-18090...a bit bigger than the Harvard OT and multi-tapped (which is something I wanted as I also have a 4 ohm 2x10 cab that I love and I figured I might want to use that sometimes).

    All-in-all, I gotta say, it turned out better than I expected. I actually like it more than my old Harvard. Seems to have a bit more clean headroom and the overdriven sounds hang together a bit better before falling into that tweedy "wooliness." I've gigged with it a few times (I play almost exclusively in small clubs these days...a few private parties...but no big stages anymore) and it's damn near perfect, at least for my classic rock/r&b band. Has the right balance of clean headroom to overdriven tones / volume. Here are some photos and a clip.

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    Oh and being from California...I wasn't about to label it after some Ivy League school...so I've called it The Stanford

    BTW, cab is loaded with a beautiful old teal-framed Jensen C10Q...one of my all-time favorite speakers.



  • #2
    Welcome to the place! Very nice, amd hope there's more to come!

    Justin
    "Wow it's red! That doesn't look like the standard Marshall red. It's more like hooker lipstick/clown nose/poodle pecker red." - Chuck H. -
    "Of course that means playing **LOUD** , best but useless solution to modern sissy snowflake players." - J.M. Fahey -
    "All I ever managed to do with that amp was... kill small rodents within a 50 yard radius of my practice building." - Tone Meister -

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    • #3
      Nice job!
      Originally posted by leonc View Post
      There's no 50V neg bias lead so I did what Fender did with Princetons and took a lead off the 5V winding on pin 4 of the rectifier, then used a 100k resistor in place of the 50k resistor to knock the voltage down.
      I think you meant the HV winding, not the 5V heater winding.
      Originally posted by Enzo
      I have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."


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      • #4
        Thanks - Justin!

        g-one! Yes, that's right -I meant the HV winding to the rectifier--pin 4--as I mentioned. Thanks.

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        • #5
          Nice workmanship and very good presentation that you put together with the stills AND the video.

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          • #6
            Thanks Tom.

            I'd highly recommend building a Harvard for anyone into building, who is ready to move past kits. It is a relatively easy build and would be a great way to wean oneself from relying on kit builders to put together parts and so one. You have the Fender schematic and layout readily available and plenty of ideas floating around for transformers, and other parts. Of all the smaller Fenders, this and the 6G3 Deluxe are probably my favorites.

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