I have a 68 Pro Reverb that I had Ted Weber recone the original Oxford speakers in because one was blown and the other was fuzzing out. I've been playing it for a while.
This amp had a weird circuit in it, with a bias balance pot and 150 ohm cathode resistors on the power tubes, as well as the snubber caps.
When I first got this amp I couldn't find a schematic that matched, but just found that it is probably an AB668.
According to the schematic it has an 8 ohm output transformer, and when I had Ted recone the speakers I assumed it was a typical Fender with a 4 ohm output tranny and had him rebuild them as 8 ohm speakers for a 4 ohm load. Now it seems I'm running them on an 8 ohm transformer.
Fender was capable of anything back then, so who knows what I've got here.
Question is, how do I know for sure? Do I do that test where you put an AC voltage through the transformer and use calculations to figure the output impedance? Or is there a simpler way to tell?
If it's an 8 ohm tranny I'll have to either change the transformer, recone the speakers yet again, or buy new speakers.
This amp had a weird circuit in it, with a bias balance pot and 150 ohm cathode resistors on the power tubes, as well as the snubber caps.
When I first got this amp I couldn't find a schematic that matched, but just found that it is probably an AB668.
According to the schematic it has an 8 ohm output transformer, and when I had Ted recone the speakers I assumed it was a typical Fender with a 4 ohm output tranny and had him rebuild them as 8 ohm speakers for a 4 ohm load. Now it seems I'm running them on an 8 ohm transformer.
Fender was capable of anything back then, so who knows what I've got here.
Question is, how do I know for sure? Do I do that test where you put an AC voltage through the transformer and use calculations to figure the output impedance? Or is there a simpler way to tell?
If it's an 8 ohm tranny I'll have to either change the transformer, recone the speakers yet again, or buy new speakers.
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