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Where to find this jack?
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Try it, pins were inserted there once, can be pulled and reinserted the other way, I do that all the time.
That said, look carefully under good light, there are small tabs punched in so they work as "arrowheads" or fishing hook tips, so they go in easy and lock, you must push them in or straighten them, usually with a largish sewing needle or a fine screwdriver tip before removing them, don´t just use brute force.]
*Some* just have a punched "wart" or dimple and only friction fit, those can be straight pulled with long nose pliers.
Juan Manuel Fahey
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Originally posted by tedmich View Postgood luck, I can never find jack...
[ATTACH=CONFIG]53694[/ATTACH]
(kidding, its Jim Williams famous bench at Linear Tech, mine has <10 strata currently...)Logic is an organized way of going wrong with confidence
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I don't judge. Each to his own and some people can function quite well in that sort of mess. Me? I'm quite the opposite and maybe even a little OCD. That would drive me nuts. I could never function in such disorganization."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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Originally posted by The Dude View PostThat would drive me nuts. I could never function in such disorganization.
On the other side of the coin, folks like my brother who has a squirrel like tendency to stash everything away. If I'm working on one of his vehicles, I have to be careful not to turn my back, lest the tools get put away in the middle of the job!Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Back to tdlunsfo's original question, I have seen the backwards jacks in some Randall stuff, but they were the version with extra long legs.
Unable to find a current source for any of the 'backward' style leaf jacks like this.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Originally posted by g1 View PostSome have a fear of putting things away for fear of forgetting where things are, better to keep everything in plain sight! (but I wouldn't know anyone like that ).
On the other side of the coin, folks like my brother who has a squirrel like tendency to stash everything away. If I'm working on one of his vehicles, I have to be careful not to turn my back, lest the tools get put away in the middle of the job!Logic is an organized way of going wrong with confidence
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Marshall's JMP1 preamp uses one four-pin version on the input. In TAD (Germany) they have it.
https://www.tubeampdoctor.com/produc...rs&language=en
As J.M. Fahey says, when I needed to replace it I used a standard one, reversing its pins.
It is advisable not to touch the top of the contacts to avoid deforming them. Better to hold them below with suitable pliers and push up.
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All, I was able to swap the pins with a little more effort. Amp works fine now. Good to know there is source as all of the jacks in this amp where starting to get pretty corroded. As for the workbench picture.. no way for me. I clean up my bench in between each job. I'm way too OCD. Also I didn't find a schematic but ended up not needing one.
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