Ya know,
Sometimes the easiest-best solution is right there in front of your face & you can't see the forest for the trees.
I went back to the old scope chassis to try & match up the wires to the transformer (fortunately I had the foresight to leave part of the original wire & insulation on the transformer) & realized the best & easiest thing to do is just use the old scope chassis as my tube burning station. DUH!
It has all the filament wiring to all the tube sockets (all I have to do is wire them to the appropriate pins) and also a crap load of tube sockets already mounted. Fortunately back in the day, they didn't omit the pins on the sockets that they didn't use.
Because of the socket design, they could be rearranged even if they didn't.
The chassis also has many cap-cans in it, too that were all working when I fired it up before I cannibalized it. At the very least I'll just have to put fresh ones in the holes.
The transformer has two mondo high current 6.3V filament windings. It looks like it split them between the octal bases & the 7 & 9 pins tubes. Probably to keep the high current users isolated from the high gain stages. Nice to have 2 so I don't overload the transformer.
This scope also used 4ea 5V4 rectifier tubes that are all wired up as they need to be with silver busses between all the pins for burning 5U4's. All I'd need to do is work up a load for them and this thing is full of hi-wattage wire wound resistors that were used for dropping purposes.
The transformer also has at least 2 center-tapped windings for the HV & a handful of 2 wire secondaries, too.
There are a couple of sockets for 6X4's too. I'll leave them there, but I doubt I'd ever have much need for them as only the older cheaper amps use that rectifier.
The other octal sockets are kind of strewn throughout the chassis & I'll probably have to chassis punch out some of the many 7 pin socket holes & add some, but no big deal there.
I picked this thing up for $3.00 in a yard sale as a curiosity before I started my biz...I never imagined I'd ever be using it for anything.
Thanx LoudThud & all for your input on this issue. I'll keep you posted. glen
Sometimes the easiest-best solution is right there in front of your face & you can't see the forest for the trees.
I went back to the old scope chassis to try & match up the wires to the transformer (fortunately I had the foresight to leave part of the original wire & insulation on the transformer) & realized the best & easiest thing to do is just use the old scope chassis as my tube burning station. DUH!
It has all the filament wiring to all the tube sockets (all I have to do is wire them to the appropriate pins) and also a crap load of tube sockets already mounted. Fortunately back in the day, they didn't omit the pins on the sockets that they didn't use.
Because of the socket design, they could be rearranged even if they didn't.
The chassis also has many cap-cans in it, too that were all working when I fired it up before I cannibalized it. At the very least I'll just have to put fresh ones in the holes.
The transformer has two mondo high current 6.3V filament windings. It looks like it split them between the octal bases & the 7 & 9 pins tubes. Probably to keep the high current users isolated from the high gain stages. Nice to have 2 so I don't overload the transformer.
This scope also used 4ea 5V4 rectifier tubes that are all wired up as they need to be with silver busses between all the pins for burning 5U4's. All I'd need to do is work up a load for them and this thing is full of hi-wattage wire wound resistors that were used for dropping purposes.
The transformer also has at least 2 center-tapped windings for the HV & a handful of 2 wire secondaries, too.
There are a couple of sockets for 6X4's too. I'll leave them there, but I doubt I'd ever have much need for them as only the older cheaper amps use that rectifier.
The other octal sockets are kind of strewn throughout the chassis & I'll probably have to chassis punch out some of the many 7 pin socket holes & add some, but no big deal there.
I picked this thing up for $3.00 in a yard sale as a curiosity before I started my biz...I never imagined I'd ever be using it for anything.
Thanx LoudThud & all for your input on this issue. I'll keep you posted. glen
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