Anybody know what the PT in a Music Man 2275-65(65 watt with 12ax7PI) is capable of in the heater circuit?
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You can also work backwards from what the amp uses. Two 6CA7s and one 12AX7, add up the heater currents and add a bit for safety factor, 4 amps?
But if it has an original Type 1 transformer, that they used a few different model amps like the 130 watt heads, with 4 6CA7s, then 7 amps?
Just a guess.
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MM didn't buy the transformers out of a manufacturer's catalog, they were wound to spec. Custom made in other words. Guys designing amps in their basement look at catalog specs because that is the only source of transformers they have. Engineers in the business of designing amps determine the current they need, then add a margin for safety and then specify those ratings to a transformer company to be made.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Originally posted by jbltwin1 View PostI have seen manufacturer data published on transformers for sale when they are new. It's one of the specs people look at when they design an amp. I was just hoping some old data was still around for MM's.
I guess it went the other way round.
MM first designed the amp, and then ordered custom made transformers, from their OEM supplier.
I very much doubt they shopped around to see what commercial/off the shelf transformer they could use.
So definitely somebody had data and specs on those transformers: MM Engineering Dept and the involved manufacturers.
Data which does not need to be spread to the general public, not even to MM AWSC which would simply order "a Sixty Five transformer, part number xxxxx " or something similar, if ever needed.
*Maybe* Mercury Magnetics, classic transformer cloners, could have such data (ask them) but even so, it must have been reverse engineered, not pulled from moth and rat chewed humid blueprints.Juan Manuel Fahey
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