I met an old-timer over the weekend with original Gibson service manuals with my schematic of the GA-75 and no reference to the field coil at all. I'm absolutely convinced the speaker and electronics are original, but the field coil did not appear to be a part of the B+ at all, because there was a selenium rectifier, dropping resistor (125 ohms) and filter cap (40uF) attached directly to the speaker frame. There would be no need for those parts if it were connected after the B+. I'm thinking the quote from Rhodesplyr on the current field coil thread may be original wiring directly after the fuse:
"...but my five minute power supply consisted of four diodes, a resistor, a capacitor, and 80VAC from the Variac. Worked like a charm."
I cannot verify the connection because someone had been in the amp before me and the wires were disconnected. Could this connection be accurate? (connected to line voltage after the fuse, speaker frame grounded) Anyone ever see one?
This would be an obvious candidate to drop in the P15N with no other changes, and perhaps I will after hearing the F15N, but I have a strange need to restore it since it is almost there, with some minor rebuilding.
P.S. loudthud,
I have a letter from Novenber 1947 from JBL himself originally specifying 13500 Gauss for the D series. Maybe the 11000 gauss that you mentioned is where the finished product wound up. Splitting hairs here, but it was nice to see something in print backed up by the original source.
"...but my five minute power supply consisted of four diodes, a resistor, a capacitor, and 80VAC from the Variac. Worked like a charm."
I cannot verify the connection because someone had been in the amp before me and the wires were disconnected. Could this connection be accurate? (connected to line voltage after the fuse, speaker frame grounded) Anyone ever see one?
This would be an obvious candidate to drop in the P15N with no other changes, and perhaps I will after hearing the F15N, but I have a strange need to restore it since it is almost there, with some minor rebuilding.
P.S. loudthud,
I have a letter from Novenber 1947 from JBL himself originally specifying 13500 Gauss for the D series. Maybe the 11000 gauss that you mentioned is where the finished product wound up. Splitting hairs here, but it was nice to see something in print backed up by the original source.
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