A young guy at work told me his dad had an old Gibson amp in the attic that hadn't worked in years and almost
caught on fire last time it was plugged in. When he described it and said it was kind of wedge shaped I tried to
act disinterested.
A couple weeks later I bought it for $100
The upper 200Ω 10W resistor and 25µF capacitor were burnt to ash and the power supply choke smoked.
I replaced those parts and totally rebuilt and rewired the power supply.
Next power up the resistor burnt and the new cap exploded.
THEN I realized the 7199 phase inverter tube had been replaced with a 12AX7 with no rewiring of the tube
socket. Bought a 7199 tube and all or the other eight tubes and the next power up was much more successful
but a lot of loud hum.
More investigation showed the earlier tech had replaced the original 20/20µ 450V audio cap with a single
40µF cap and combined the circuits. I replaced that with two new 20µF 450V caps on separate circuits.
22 days after purchase and $380 in parts later I have a vintage tube amp that sounds like a 1960s amp
is supposed to with no noticeable background hum buzz or hiss.
This could be my highest profit turnover ever.
I don't see that happening.
Being they only made about 1132 of this model I'm thinking this one is keeper
Picture red arrows point out the bad or failing parts. Other picture is the repaired chassis.
I think I'll leave the tolex and grill cloth just as it it.
I'm two years older than this amp and that look just fits me!
caught on fire last time it was plugged in. When he described it and said it was kind of wedge shaped I tried to
act disinterested.
A couple weeks later I bought it for $100
The upper 200Ω 10W resistor and 25µF capacitor were burnt to ash and the power supply choke smoked.
I replaced those parts and totally rebuilt and rewired the power supply.
Next power up the resistor burnt and the new cap exploded.
THEN I realized the 7199 phase inverter tube had been replaced with a 12AX7 with no rewiring of the tube
socket. Bought a 7199 tube and all or the other eight tubes and the next power up was much more successful
but a lot of loud hum.
More investigation showed the earlier tech had replaced the original 20/20µ 450V audio cap with a single
40µF cap and combined the circuits. I replaced that with two new 20µF 450V caps on separate circuits.
22 days after purchase and $380 in parts later I have a vintage tube amp that sounds like a 1960s amp
is supposed to with no noticeable background hum buzz or hiss.
This could be my highest profit turnover ever.
I don't see that happening.
Being they only made about 1132 of this model I'm thinking this one is keeper
Picture red arrows point out the bad or failing parts. Other picture is the repaired chassis.
I think I'll leave the tolex and grill cloth just as it it.
I'm two years older than this amp and that look just fits me!
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