When last I posted, I was testing a one-size-fits-all PCB for repairing all of the bigger Thomas Organ Vox amplifiers.
That board worked; I did a couple of forehead-slappers on it, but there were easy workarounds and patches, so the boards were usable. I'm patching it into a recipient Beatle amp now, at my usual (slow...) pace.
But I did discover a problem. The reverb tanks for the earlier amps are not the same as the later ones. After some thought, I reworked the repair board to work with the earlier, transformer-driven tanks, and also fitted the early distortion switching and bipolar preamplifiers. I just finished testing this version of the board, and it's working on the bench. There is a Royal Guardsman that's going to have this one implanted in the next few weeks, so I'll have a full listening test then.
It looks like this is going to work out - clip out the entire old PCB and all the wires, solder the new direct-to-control wiring with flexible hookup wire, and have a fully rebuilt Thomas Vox amp.
I'll post some pictures of the rebuild.
That board worked; I did a couple of forehead-slappers on it, but there were easy workarounds and patches, so the boards were usable. I'm patching it into a recipient Beatle amp now, at my usual (slow...) pace.
But I did discover a problem. The reverb tanks for the earlier amps are not the same as the later ones. After some thought, I reworked the repair board to work with the earlier, transformer-driven tanks, and also fitted the early distortion switching and bipolar preamplifiers. I just finished testing this version of the board, and it's working on the bench. There is a Royal Guardsman that's going to have this one implanted in the next few weeks, so I'll have a full listening test then.
It looks like this is going to work out - clip out the entire old PCB and all the wires, solder the new direct-to-control wiring with flexible hookup wire, and have a fully rebuilt Thomas Vox amp.
I'll post some pictures of the rebuild.
Comment