Instead of re-using that nasty galvanized steel plate with the two XLR connectors on it, I scrapped that and drove down to Industrial Metal Supply a few miles away and brought back a small sheet of 6061-T6 0.062" thick aluminum, and cut a small piece out to make a new plate to fill that opening. I mounted the IEC-320 AC mains connector on that plate, and next to it a Switchcraft B3MG 3-pin Gold pin output connector. This simplifies the AC mains wiring, bypassing that screwed-down cable clamp on the floor in that right rear corner.
While I was removing the short XLR output pigtail with it's in-line connector, I found on the preamp end of the harness connector one of the output wires' terminals was buggered, the result having left a burn mark in the nylon. I was able to extract that pin, and restore it's original shape and clean up the residue before re-installing the terminal. Minor tweaking on the XLR pigtail connector pins, and now that wiring is restored. Today, I'm installing some insulated turret terminals on the preamp rear wall to install the AC coupling cap, followed by a 20dB resistor pad with 100 ohm source that will feed that added 1/4" insulated connector on the control panel. It had been wired with a 22k source/10k shunt from the output connector....first feeding that Switchcraft D3M connector next to the Cannon 3-pin male output, with a kluged bunch of wires that fed that output jack on the control panel.
I followed RG's suggestion of adding an output fuse holder/fuse in the output line. I installed a fuse holder on the circuit board in the power amp, where the original discrete diode bridge was installed. While I was back in that chassis, I installed the 150VAC MOV across the input to the power xfmr primary.
I probably won't see the AC Mains barrier strip (along with some other parts ordered) until Monday, so installing the attenuator network on the preamp chassis, then wire up the 6-Pin DIN male cable and build the 5-switch pedal substitution box that will allow turning on/off the Distortion, Repeat Percussion and Midrange Boost circuits, along with muting/unmuting the Reverb and Vibrato functions. So, as the project unfolds towards completion, lots of little steps. I still haven't even turned this amp on, though it did have a note on it stating 'HUMS', so I have to assume it was working to some extent. I should have listened to it before doing all this work, just to have a frame of reference!
While I was removing the short XLR output pigtail with it's in-line connector, I found on the preamp end of the harness connector one of the output wires' terminals was buggered, the result having left a burn mark in the nylon. I was able to extract that pin, and restore it's original shape and clean up the residue before re-installing the terminal. Minor tweaking on the XLR pigtail connector pins, and now that wiring is restored. Today, I'm installing some insulated turret terminals on the preamp rear wall to install the AC coupling cap, followed by a 20dB resistor pad with 100 ohm source that will feed that added 1/4" insulated connector on the control panel. It had been wired with a 22k source/10k shunt from the output connector....first feeding that Switchcraft D3M connector next to the Cannon 3-pin male output, with a kluged bunch of wires that fed that output jack on the control panel.
I followed RG's suggestion of adding an output fuse holder/fuse in the output line. I installed a fuse holder on the circuit board in the power amp, where the original discrete diode bridge was installed. While I was back in that chassis, I installed the 150VAC MOV across the input to the power xfmr primary.
I probably won't see the AC Mains barrier strip (along with some other parts ordered) until Monday, so installing the attenuator network on the preamp chassis, then wire up the 6-Pin DIN male cable and build the 5-switch pedal substitution box that will allow turning on/off the Distortion, Repeat Percussion and Midrange Boost circuits, along with muting/unmuting the Reverb and Vibrato functions. So, as the project unfolds towards completion, lots of little steps. I still haven't even turned this amp on, though it did have a note on it stating 'HUMS', so I have to assume it was working to some extent. I should have listened to it before doing all this work, just to have a frame of reference!
Comment