Hi all.
When evaluating some used piece of equipment like a "dead" guitar amp, or some other device like an old radio or PA amp, are there good rules of thumb that will allow me to make a snap judgment about suitability for reuse if I have limited visual access because I'm shopping online or at a yard sale where the owners won't let me "peek"?
Seems to me that the "bigger is always better" argument is kinda useful but has serious limitations. Number one, transformers serve many functions inside a guitar amp: They deliver power to the rectifier(s) and match the output of the power tubes to the speaker(s) or other loads, but they also may find use as power chokes(?) or in between tubes (phase inversion?) and as drivers for reverb tanks. Going further afield, as in the case of the chassis shown below which came from an unknown (Conn?) electronic organ, I've seen little gizmos that look like transformers but apparently serve some other function: In tone generation circuits for organ voices or percussion sounds, i.e. oscillators?
One tip I've picked up is to count the tubes, look up their current and voltage specs, and--at least in terms of figuring out what kind of power transformer they use--make a quantitative judgment about the PT based on that information alone.
For instance: This little baby, whose innards I've carefully gutted so as to allow the power connections to survive untainted, sports a massive brick of a power transformer that obviously was at one time capable of safely driving all of the following tubes: (1) 5U4, (2) 6AU6's, (1) 6BA6, (2) 6C4's, (2) 6V6's, (2) 12AU7's and (1) 12AX7. Assuming the tranny's still OK, which any idiot with an Ohmmeter can figure out, then I've got the basis for an amplifier that will "tumble the walls", right? Or, do I need to be more conservative, because guitar amps tend to push their power transformers a little harder than other devices, such as the putative Conn this chassis came from?
More vexing is the issue of output transformers. Figuring out how they function in a guitar amp seems to require some deep knowledge of weird stuff like cube roots, vectors and transfer functions.... Which are utter Greek to me. But in the case at hand (and based on a tip I received here in response to another post), I'm making the call that this organ's tiny output transformer won't end up being deployed in the Walls of Jericho Amp, because the organ used it in a power amp that formed a sub-circuit within a larger master circuit. IOW, since I know that some of the tubes were used as oscillators or whatever, I can reason that the actual power amp was built around some subset of the overall tube complement--maybe two or three 6- or 12A_whatevers in the preamplifier section, another smallish tube for phase inversion, plus the two 6V6's in push-pull mode. Right? So, if and when I get around to building a big 'n bad amp, I may be able to us this PT, but will definitely need to find a bigger OT.
No worries. Since all I'm interested in building at present are low-wattage gems with killer tone, maybe I can use the organ's OT in a cute little bug that lives inside a toaster oven, like the "Li'l Smokey" that was recommended to me as a first foray into amp building? I've gotten to the point where I sorta understand the "Put so many volts AC in one side, measure what comes out of the other side, use my slide rule to do something or other, and end up with a chart that says something like 'One 6V6 in Class A driving one 8-Ohm speaker will see an input impedance from the OT that'll make it feel warm 'n cuddly, not freezing to death or having hot flashes.'" approach, but I know and understand that grownups with math skills and engineering backgrounds approach output transformer selection in a far more sophisticated manner, and it is this knowledge that I aim to eventually work out for myself, even if I have to re-carve some neural pathways in my brain that seem to have burned out upon orbital reentry after my last space walk.
Here's da pix: