bottom line, the tone will likely change. Review the article, posted in this thread.
That is their bottom line in the article, but strictly speaking from a scientific/experimental point of view, it is a secondary conclusion provided with no supporting evidence. In other words, the article presents the conclusion reached through experiment and then asserts an untested follow-on hypothesis based on the main conclusion.
And, that untested hypothesis is that the changed
ripple frequency will have a tonal effect. They don't assert anything about using a 60Hz transformer with a 50Hz main current, or vice versa. The article is about ripple impacting tone; they say it happens, but also don't say how or why.
I don't like the article from a scientific rigor standpoint either, because they never show the new power supply circuit, so you can't know if there was a flaw contributing to their results.
If my memory serves me correctly, some of Fender's export transformers came with selector switches to be able to choose voltages ...
I can only speak to vintage Fender amps; these simply have various primary tappings to match local voltage conditions, and are hardwired to the power cord entry. Regardless of the tapping chosen (even 110/120v), you get the benefit of the larger core for 50Hz operation.
Did you try the export on a 50 Hz circuit and compare to that on a 60 Hz circuit.
No. I live in the U.S. and I'm not going to build a generator to give me a 50Hz mains frequency. Even if I did, I couldn't be sure any significant result wasn't due to a poor attempt at replicating a power company.
It my opinion, that most rigs are not limited by the amplifier but by the speaker themselves. ...
The alternative transformer market provides some specs on replacement transformers. ...
So what does a bass player do if they want to play a bass with a B-0 string (about 30 Hz) ...
These comments do not help, because they diverge from the question regarding a
power transformer. Yes, if you change speakers or output transformers, the sound will change. But that isn't the question.
Back to your earlier question:
, I used to own a blackface Princeton Reverb that had an export transformer intended for 50Hz, but I obviously used it on 60Hz U.S. line current. It sounded like a Princeton Reverb. I was always told the transformer was probably running cooler than the 60Hz version.
Did you try the export on a 50 Hz circuit and compare to that on a 60 Hz circuit.
I can say
from direct experience that playing multiple examples of a single vintage Fender amp model, with both domestic (U.S., 60Hz) and export (50Hz) power transformers, same model original speakers, I could not hear a difference between the versions that exceeded the normal variation of tone between any two individual amps of the same manufacturer, model and period.
This experience was derived over a period of several years in which I bought and sold numerous vintage amps, had a personal collection of ~20 amps, was a fixture at several vintage guitar shops in/around Nashville, and attended numerous vintage guitar shows as both a buyer and dealer (full disclosure: had buy/sell authority while helping a friend starting out as a vintage guitar dealer).
So we're citing references to support an assertion...
Look at Radiotron Designer's Handbook, Volume 4, Chapter 5.5(iii), Equation 2 (found on page 235). A digital copy of RDH4 is available
here.
Equation 2 is given as a fundamental transformer equation, and gives the number of primary turns needed when primary voltage, frequency of operation, maximum flux density and cross-secitonal area of the transformer core are known.
Primary voltage is in the numerator; both cross-sectional area and frequency are in the denominator. Because the primary voltage is set by the power company and is assumed fixed, if frequency goes down (from 60Hz to 50Hz) then cross-sectional area must go up.
Translation: a 50Hz PT has a larger core than a 60Hz PT, all else equal.
I already said this another way 3 posts ago.