Hi folks. I had a bit of a theory thought this morning. I have been servicing my 1971 Super Reverb. Changed all the tone circuit coupling caps, power supply caps, bias caps, and the RCA jacks. The
tremolo roach too. How do the pros do it? Is there any need to lift the board on this 71? I did not see any wires going under the main board. I did lift off the power section board under the dog house when
I did those caps , but not for any others on the main board. I simply heated up the joint, pulled up the old component leads, trimmed the new component leads, reheated the joint and pushed in
the new capacitor lead. Reflowed the hole and everything looks good. From the top side. I cannot see the bottom of the board, as I did not remove it. In earlier tweed amps I built there were
leads on the bottom side of the board. I don't believe there are any under the board on my 71. Am I correct here? Am I right to assume the board should be lifted on earlier circuits to ensure
any bottom wires don't become displaced when heating joints, yet not necessary on later models like my 71?
Some joints on my 71 have four or more leads going into 1 hole. It can be tight when trying to push in a new component again, after puling the old one out. What do you do to ease
installation in a crowded hole? I have been using longer needle nose pliers. Seems to work. Here is my 71 board for reference, before I changed any components.
The board on this one seems to be a 2 piece board. Can I assume the bottom board piece is solid and covers up all the connections so they do not potentially touch the chassis? The board does not
seem elevated. In the end, after I did the work, the amp sounds great and works fine. Thanks in advance for your replies. I am always learning more here every day.
tremolo roach too. How do the pros do it? Is there any need to lift the board on this 71? I did not see any wires going under the main board. I did lift off the power section board under the dog house when
I did those caps , but not for any others on the main board. I simply heated up the joint, pulled up the old component leads, trimmed the new component leads, reheated the joint and pushed in
the new capacitor lead. Reflowed the hole and everything looks good. From the top side. I cannot see the bottom of the board, as I did not remove it. In earlier tweed amps I built there were
leads on the bottom side of the board. I don't believe there are any under the board on my 71. Am I correct here? Am I right to assume the board should be lifted on earlier circuits to ensure
any bottom wires don't become displaced when heating joints, yet not necessary on later models like my 71?
Some joints on my 71 have four or more leads going into 1 hole. It can be tight when trying to push in a new component again, after puling the old one out. What do you do to ease
installation in a crowded hole? I have been using longer needle nose pliers. Seems to work. Here is my 71 board for reference, before I changed any components.
The board on this one seems to be a 2 piece board. Can I assume the bottom board piece is solid and covers up all the connections so they do not potentially touch the chassis? The board does not
seem elevated. In the end, after I did the work, the amp sounds great and works fine. Thanks in advance for your replies. I am always learning more here every day.
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