I bought this non-working 1979 Fender Super Six Reverb a few years back off Craigslist for $250 and I'm finally getting around to getting her running again. All six original speakers (Quam branded) were toast and falling apart. I was lucky enough to have a buddy donate six original 10-inch Jensens speakers that came out of his Super Six Reverb!
When I cracked it open I noticed that the artificial center tap had burned up and the 470-ohm screen resistors were cracked and drifted. I'm thinking/ hoping that it was just a power tube shorting internally that burned the parts up. I can see that someone had already changed the filter caps, but I will have to go back and double check their work.
What I have done:
Added two 100-Ohm resistors to make a new artificial center tap from heater to ground.
Installed new 470-ohm wire wound resistors on all the power tubes.
Reran the wiring from the 3-prong power plug to eliminate the auxiliary plug and polarity switch.
Next Steps / Questions:
I was planning on giving it a once-over one more time, and then trying to fire it up for the first time to see what it does. I'm hoping that it was just a bad power tube that caused all the troubles. I figure that will help me diagnose whatever else is wrong with this amp and let me know if the transformers are still good.
Is there anything else that I should check before trying to power it on or something I am missing?
The board is severely warped and probably has tweed disease, so I imagine at some point I will have to make up a new board from Garolite to replace it, but I wanted to see how it sounded now before all that work. From my experience with these old Fender amps, I am also suspect of many of the blue and brown "turd" capacitors. I worked on a different Super Six a few years ago back and got it running again, so I am just trying to familiarize myself with the process again.
Flickr Images Linked Below:
When I cracked it open I noticed that the artificial center tap had burned up and the 470-ohm screen resistors were cracked and drifted. I'm thinking/ hoping that it was just a power tube shorting internally that burned the parts up. I can see that someone had already changed the filter caps, but I will have to go back and double check their work.
What I have done:
Added two 100-Ohm resistors to make a new artificial center tap from heater to ground.
Installed new 470-ohm wire wound resistors on all the power tubes.
Reran the wiring from the 3-prong power plug to eliminate the auxiliary plug and polarity switch.
Next Steps / Questions:
I was planning on giving it a once-over one more time, and then trying to fire it up for the first time to see what it does. I'm hoping that it was just a bad power tube that caused all the troubles. I figure that will help me diagnose whatever else is wrong with this amp and let me know if the transformers are still good.
Is there anything else that I should check before trying to power it on or something I am missing?
The board is severely warped and probably has tweed disease, so I imagine at some point I will have to make up a new board from Garolite to replace it, but I wanted to see how it sounded now before all that work. From my experience with these old Fender amps, I am also suspect of many of the blue and brown "turd" capacitors. I worked on a different Super Six a few years ago back and got it running again, so I am just trying to familiarize myself with the process again.
Flickr Images Linked Below:
- Super Six Craigslist Listing
- Super Six Front
- Super Six Gut-shot
- Super Six Original Condition
- Super Six Burned Resistors
- Super Six Caps Replaced Before
- Super Six Replacement Speakers Front
- Super Six Replacement Speakers Rear
- Super Six New Artificial Center Taps
- Super Six New Screen Resistors
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