"Not mentioned in the Leo Fender argument is that Fender continued to employ eyelet board construction LONG after every other MFG had gone to PCB. Hmmm?"
That is true but had nothing to do with Leo, he sold the company in '65, LONG BEFORE every other MFG had gone to PCB. After Leo left, Fender were very slow to introduce changes (especially after the lukewarm reception of the quasi-cathode biased amps & even that took them 3 years & no doubt increased their caution). In the cases of the Champ, Princeton, Deluxe, Vibrolux, these changes are barely worth mentioning, a couple of resistors, a couple of caps & a little more B+. It's fun, but ultimately pointless to speculate as to what might have occurred had he stayed with the company...based on the frequent updates right up to the point he left (it's more unusual than usual to see 2 brown/blonde amps that are the same), it's anyone's guess.
That is true but had nothing to do with Leo, he sold the company in '65, LONG BEFORE every other MFG had gone to PCB. After Leo left, Fender were very slow to introduce changes (especially after the lukewarm reception of the quasi-cathode biased amps & even that took them 3 years & no doubt increased their caution). In the cases of the Champ, Princeton, Deluxe, Vibrolux, these changes are barely worth mentioning, a couple of resistors, a couple of caps & a little more B+. It's fun, but ultimately pointless to speculate as to what might have occurred had he stayed with the company...based on the frequent updates right up to the point he left (it's more unusual than usual to see 2 brown/blonde amps that are the same), it's anyone's guess.
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