One Leesona 102 was not enough so I bought another as backup! I'm still shocked that I ran across a second one in such good shape. It is a Leesona 102B that still has some of the original paperwork dated January 1957, right at the start of the P.A.F. era. The Leesona 102B differs a little cosmetically from the Leesona 102 but mechanically the drive gears, clutches, and traverse cam and layout on this 1957 Leesona 102B are identical to my 1948 Leesona 102. The housings on the Leesona 102b are changed in an effort to seal the oil in better but it still leaks oil.
There is one major improvement though to the auto stop counters with the Leesona 102B that makes them rock solid reliable compared to the crappy auto stop on the Leesona 102. The Leesona 102 had a wonky lever/mercury switch set up that just did not work reliably. The Leesona 102B has an electronic auto stop and improved solenoid set-up that is still running perfectly on this machine. This is speculation on my part but if Gibson had a Leesona 102 and also later bought a Leesona 102B it would explain why some later Leesona winding pattern P.A.F.'s have a much more consistent ohm range than earlier P.A.F.'s. If these later P.A.F's and Pat. # pickups were wound on a Leesona 102B with the improved auto stop it would follow that you would get a more consistent ohm range.
Anyway here are some pictures. This machine is pretty much as it was in 1957 and it still works flawlessly. I have it set up to run P.A.F. bobbins and a P-90 bobbin. It also has quick release chucks so I can do narrow spaced P.A.F. repairs and 7 string stuff if I want. Right now I'm going to run some custom P.A.F. models on it. My 1948 Leesona 102 will continue to wind the standard P.A.F. models on my site.
There is one major improvement though to the auto stop counters with the Leesona 102B that makes them rock solid reliable compared to the crappy auto stop on the Leesona 102. The Leesona 102 had a wonky lever/mercury switch set up that just did not work reliably. The Leesona 102B has an electronic auto stop and improved solenoid set-up that is still running perfectly on this machine. This is speculation on my part but if Gibson had a Leesona 102 and also later bought a Leesona 102B it would explain why some later Leesona winding pattern P.A.F.'s have a much more consistent ohm range than earlier P.A.F.'s. If these later P.A.F's and Pat. # pickups were wound on a Leesona 102B with the improved auto stop it would follow that you would get a more consistent ohm range.
Anyway here are some pictures. This machine is pretty much as it was in 1957 and it still works flawlessly. I have it set up to run P.A.F. bobbins and a P-90 bobbin. It also has quick release chucks so I can do narrow spaced P.A.F. repairs and 7 string stuff if I want. Right now I'm going to run some custom P.A.F. models on it. My 1948 Leesona 102 will continue to wind the standard P.A.F. models on my site.
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