I have an Ampeg B-15R PortaFlex Combo Amp in the shop for Preventative Maintenance. After going thru the amp itself, curing front panel PCB control solder fractures, then pounding out all the dents and abuse to the tube cage, and, finding one of the four 6L6GC power tubes was only running 6mA against two @ 34mA and one at 31mA, installing new matched quad set of J/J's that landed at 38mA each, I finally turned my attention to the cabinet and the hold-down clamps and square bolts threaded into the flip top.
First, one end of the 1/2" wide 5/16" thick neoprene rubber gasket material is missing, with the rest that's present full of tears, and probably needing complete replacement, the one area of these that has always left me puzzled is the hold-down clamps. None of these when I began were holding anything down...totally loose, with three of the square bolts threaded into the flip-top plate rotated to place the corner upright, so there'd be a bit more height to pull down on....which only served to distort the clamps.
These clamps are cheaply made, nothing precision about them, and are held into the cabinet with long #6-32 pan head screws and keps nuts on the inside of the cabinet. I thought about it, looking at these, and wondered what do I have in my tooling to both straighten the clamp face where they engage the square bolts, and then, how can I increases the clamping force without having to drill new holes to mount them.
I pulled out one of my larger machinist clamps, opened up the jaw, grabbed a hole reamer to use as a tightening handle, and positioned the cabinet clamp so I could pull that shape down at an angle, hoping it would apply more pulling power onto the square bolts. I also rotated those bolts so they were level, and not with the corners face up. That seems to do the trick.
Now, not being able to find my left-over roll of foam rubber gasket material, I'll see what I can find at Home Depot. I also need some edging for the base of the perforated tube cage, as at present, the two long hold-down bolts (made up from acorn nuts & # 6-32 threaded rod with a flat washer on top) they're tightened down as much as I dare, before they get distorted. I used to have a rubber gasket material to slip onto 1/16" panels such as the bottom of the tube cage. Couldn't find that exact material at McMaster-Carr, but found something similar that might work. I also didn't find any good selection of suitable 1/2" wide foam rubber gasket, adhesive backed similar to what Ampeg used.
Better than it was, for certain.
First, one end of the 1/2" wide 5/16" thick neoprene rubber gasket material is missing, with the rest that's present full of tears, and probably needing complete replacement, the one area of these that has always left me puzzled is the hold-down clamps. None of these when I began were holding anything down...totally loose, with three of the square bolts threaded into the flip-top plate rotated to place the corner upright, so there'd be a bit more height to pull down on....which only served to distort the clamps.
These clamps are cheaply made, nothing precision about them, and are held into the cabinet with long #6-32 pan head screws and keps nuts on the inside of the cabinet. I thought about it, looking at these, and wondered what do I have in my tooling to both straighten the clamp face where they engage the square bolts, and then, how can I increases the clamping force without having to drill new holes to mount them.
I pulled out one of my larger machinist clamps, opened up the jaw, grabbed a hole reamer to use as a tightening handle, and positioned the cabinet clamp so I could pull that shape down at an angle, hoping it would apply more pulling power onto the square bolts. I also rotated those bolts so they were level, and not with the corners face up. That seems to do the trick.
Now, not being able to find my left-over roll of foam rubber gasket material, I'll see what I can find at Home Depot. I also need some edging for the base of the perforated tube cage, as at present, the two long hold-down bolts (made up from acorn nuts & # 6-32 threaded rod with a flat washer on top) they're tightened down as much as I dare, before they get distorted. I used to have a rubber gasket material to slip onto 1/16" panels such as the bottom of the tube cage. Couldn't find that exact material at McMaster-Carr, but found something similar that might work. I also didn't find any good selection of suitable 1/2" wide foam rubber gasket, adhesive backed similar to what Ampeg used.
Better than it was, for certain.
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