Hey, I have posted this thread on the Acoustic board too but am also posting it here because this one seems more active. Hope that is alright.
This is puzzling to me can anyone comment??
I have an Acoustic 370 which I have had for about 5 years. I believe it works just as it should. It was recapped (not by me) when I got it, except for the 3 big electrolytics. Checking them recently they meter ok and also provide the voltages they should so to me they seem fine. It is very loud to my ear and puts out a clean sine wave up to about 155W. Here is a pic of it putting 24.9V into a 4 ohm load. This thing hangs with other relatively loud amps no problem. I have a reissue Model T and a V4.
Another 370 I got recently I somehow broke when I put a 20K sine wave into it. Not sure if this was coincidence. 3 of the RCA 48-15 output transistors were blown. IIRC, everything else checked ok. I think that was all I replaced. I got some old RCA 2N3055s from a friend. Other ppl on the net said these were a legal substitution and they are equivalent. Not sure if this is 100% true but it seems to perform basically the same as my other 370 as far as scope and voltage checks. I "matched" the 2N3055s with a Heathkit IT-18 transistor checker. I bought extra 2N3055s and only used the ones that tested the closest to the 48-15 transistors. It still puts outs a very even sine wave but it only goes up to 24.2V -- about 146W at clipping. It put out 146W for an hour and a half. I have not played it through a cab at full volume yet.
The thing is I'm working on this 470 now and it is putting out 166W at clipping into a 4 ohm load. This seems strange. I have looked at the manuals and 470 is rated at 170W RMS into 4 ohm load. This does that. Ok, that's not the strange thing. 370s in the manual claim 205W RMS into 4 ohm load. The two I have appear to me to work normally but cannot get to this output.
Could this be because of using a 1K sine wave, or because the 470 actually has more clean power but not more total power, or some other reason? I thought 270s and 370s were considered 'heavy duty' and 470s were 'medium duty.' I had a 470 which I sold to get a 370. I wanted more volume and low end and I felt like I got that.
Here is the 470 putting 25.8V into 4 ohms -- 166W. Am I being misled by something or does anything come to mind that I should be checking if my 370s actually are putting out about 75% power??
This is puzzling to me can anyone comment??
I have an Acoustic 370 which I have had for about 5 years. I believe it works just as it should. It was recapped (not by me) when I got it, except for the 3 big electrolytics. Checking them recently they meter ok and also provide the voltages they should so to me they seem fine. It is very loud to my ear and puts out a clean sine wave up to about 155W. Here is a pic of it putting 24.9V into a 4 ohm load. This thing hangs with other relatively loud amps no problem. I have a reissue Model T and a V4.
Another 370 I got recently I somehow broke when I put a 20K sine wave into it. Not sure if this was coincidence. 3 of the RCA 48-15 output transistors were blown. IIRC, everything else checked ok. I think that was all I replaced. I got some old RCA 2N3055s from a friend. Other ppl on the net said these were a legal substitution and they are equivalent. Not sure if this is 100% true but it seems to perform basically the same as my other 370 as far as scope and voltage checks. I "matched" the 2N3055s with a Heathkit IT-18 transistor checker. I bought extra 2N3055s and only used the ones that tested the closest to the 48-15 transistors. It still puts outs a very even sine wave but it only goes up to 24.2V -- about 146W at clipping. It put out 146W for an hour and a half. I have not played it through a cab at full volume yet.
The thing is I'm working on this 470 now and it is putting out 166W at clipping into a 4 ohm load. This seems strange. I have looked at the manuals and 470 is rated at 170W RMS into 4 ohm load. This does that. Ok, that's not the strange thing. 370s in the manual claim 205W RMS into 4 ohm load. The two I have appear to me to work normally but cannot get to this output.
Could this be because of using a 1K sine wave, or because the 470 actually has more clean power but not more total power, or some other reason? I thought 270s and 370s were considered 'heavy duty' and 470s were 'medium duty.' I had a 470 which I sold to get a 370. I wanted more volume and low end and I felt like I got that.
Here is the 470 putting 25.8V into 4 ohms -- 166W. Am I being misled by something or does anything come to mind that I should be checking if my 370s actually are putting out about 75% power??
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