First of all, I've read a few posts here and there saying there is no need for this conversion. In this particular case there is : the amp has revolving and recurrent problems. It was purchased from Toots and the Maytals and sat in a hot humid environment for months prior to that. The notes said "bad tubes and no reverb" , so I replaced the tubes and started examining the reverb circuit.
At this point I will say I work for a backline rental company maintaining guitars and amps when I am not filling orders. So, I have access to extra amps, some parts etc. Also the company does not provide a computer so I have to go home to post and forget some details by the time I get home.
I was able to put the suspect reverb tank in another Twin and confirm it was ok. I plugged a guitar into the reverb return and confirmed that circuit was OK. The reverb driver did not test OK. I should mention the send and return jacks were separated from the board and it didn't look like it was jumpered correctly by my predecessor. I rebuilt the driver circuit as per the schematic and I got signal to the reverb tank, but it was noisy and trebly. I traced the circuit again and found no connectivity between 2 points that should have connected. Now it sounds OK. But when I put the twin back together, no reverb. I take it back out, check through the driver and return circuits again: tests OK. Reverb starts working again, but noisy and trebly. I put it aside to work on other amps. When I got back to it, there is no sound at all.
My co worker said my predecessor experienced the same thing and the amp became known as the Bermuda Triangle amp. I want to recommend to my boss to let me rebuild the circuit on a turret board. I would also want to replace the pots to get rid of that circuit board. To keep the costs down, I would like to keep the transformers.
So, here is my question: does the reissue transformer connections correspond to the original AB763 connections. Will it be just follow the schematic or will modifications be necessary?
At this point I will say I work for a backline rental company maintaining guitars and amps when I am not filling orders. So, I have access to extra amps, some parts etc. Also the company does not provide a computer so I have to go home to post and forget some details by the time I get home.
I was able to put the suspect reverb tank in another Twin and confirm it was ok. I plugged a guitar into the reverb return and confirmed that circuit was OK. The reverb driver did not test OK. I should mention the send and return jacks were separated from the board and it didn't look like it was jumpered correctly by my predecessor. I rebuilt the driver circuit as per the schematic and I got signal to the reverb tank, but it was noisy and trebly. I traced the circuit again and found no connectivity between 2 points that should have connected. Now it sounds OK. But when I put the twin back together, no reverb. I take it back out, check through the driver and return circuits again: tests OK. Reverb starts working again, but noisy and trebly. I put it aside to work on other amps. When I got back to it, there is no sound at all.
My co worker said my predecessor experienced the same thing and the amp became known as the Bermuda Triangle amp. I want to recommend to my boss to let me rebuild the circuit on a turret board. I would also want to replace the pots to get rid of that circuit board. To keep the costs down, I would like to keep the transformers.
So, here is my question: does the reissue transformer connections correspond to the original AB763 connections. Will it be just follow the schematic or will modifications be necessary?
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