I'm the lucky new owner of what I believe is a first-gen (early 1972) Acoustic 136 bass combo amp. It's wider than it is tall with the speaker on the left and port on the right, whereas the later models (mid-1972 and later) are taller than they are wide, with the speaker on top and port on bottom. Almost every picture you find on Google is of the latter. Here's mine: https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/unof...amp-t4953.html
Unfortunately this amp has a 2-prong power cord, and it (the cord) is in really bad shape to boot. I read enough on the Internet to scare myself about the low pass coupling "death cap" and decided that I needed to upgrade to a 3-prong plug.
I tried a naive update after watching a Fender amp conversion video. Essentially I disconnected the ground select (snipped the wire to the capacitor) and wired the new 3-prong plug ground (not neutral) to the chassis. The amp was super noisy after I did that, and on further reading, this was a really not smart thing to do for a vintage amp that doesn't separate chassis and signal ground.
So I'm thinking I'll put things back the way they were, with a few exceptions:
1. I'll keep the 3-pronged plug, solely for the sake of polarity. I'll have a 50% < N < 100% chance that polarity is correct, versus 50% with the 2-pronged plug. (I don't see a reason to revert to a polarized 2-pronged plug. Is it bad form to "imply" that my amp chassis is separately grounded because it has a 3-pronged plug?)
2. I'll replace the coupling "death cap" with a Y-rated cap designed to fail open (I know, not very heavy metal).
3. I'll rewire "hot" through the fuse, rather than neutral through the fuse, which is how it's wired today.
Two questions:
1. Thoughts on any of the above? Is there a better way to approach this (in terms of safety and/or noise reduction)?
2. In the case that a 3-pronged outlet is incorrectly wired (and "neutral" is not actually neutral), is there a safe way to put a lamp across neutral and ground to indicate reversed wall outlet polarity? (If I did that and polarity was reversed, I'd be leaking hot to ground by way of the lamp, which could have unintended side effects.)
I'm very hobby-grade when it comes to this stuff, sorry if my ideas here are shockingly dumb, unsafe, etc. I hope to learn from folks who know what they're doing.
Thanks,
-Bryan
Unfortunately this amp has a 2-prong power cord, and it (the cord) is in really bad shape to boot. I read enough on the Internet to scare myself about the low pass coupling "death cap" and decided that I needed to upgrade to a 3-prong plug.
I tried a naive update after watching a Fender amp conversion video. Essentially I disconnected the ground select (snipped the wire to the capacitor) and wired the new 3-prong plug ground (not neutral) to the chassis. The amp was super noisy after I did that, and on further reading, this was a really not smart thing to do for a vintage amp that doesn't separate chassis and signal ground.
So I'm thinking I'll put things back the way they were, with a few exceptions:
1. I'll keep the 3-pronged plug, solely for the sake of polarity. I'll have a 50% < N < 100% chance that polarity is correct, versus 50% with the 2-pronged plug. (I don't see a reason to revert to a polarized 2-pronged plug. Is it bad form to "imply" that my amp chassis is separately grounded because it has a 3-pronged plug?)
2. I'll replace the coupling "death cap" with a Y-rated cap designed to fail open (I know, not very heavy metal).
3. I'll rewire "hot" through the fuse, rather than neutral through the fuse, which is how it's wired today.
Two questions:
1. Thoughts on any of the above? Is there a better way to approach this (in terms of safety and/or noise reduction)?
2. In the case that a 3-pronged outlet is incorrectly wired (and "neutral" is not actually neutral), is there a safe way to put a lamp across neutral and ground to indicate reversed wall outlet polarity? (If I did that and polarity was reversed, I'd be leaking hot to ground by way of the lamp, which could have unintended side effects.)
I'm very hobby-grade when it comes to this stuff, sorry if my ideas here are shockingly dumb, unsafe, etc. I hope to learn from folks who know what they're doing.
Thanks,
-Bryan
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