Picked this one up from Kummers Vintage. I changed out the B+ filtercaps and subbed in caps for the cathode bypasses. Very interesting amp as it appears to predate the 66J and the 99-100J series of amps. It has no model ID anywhere on the amp, only "1366" on a piece of tape on the baffleboard. The covering is the typical TV front woodgrain shelfpaper on the bottom and the top is a white elephant hide tolex. The grillcloth is a simple brown.

The amp is powered by two 6L6s, but the construction is unusual for Guild. The power transformer is bolted to the bottom of the cabinet, and the chassis (such as it is) contains the bias supply, the filter capacitors and has a 5U4 rectifier mounted. It is connected by an umbilical to the upper chassis.

The upper chassis appears to have been the same used for the Model 66 (not the "J" ) which is a transformerless ac/dc amp. However, this chassis does not have a hole punched for a rectifier, which the the Model 66 would have. Strange. The sizable output transformer is mounted in a cutout above the powertubes.

The control panel is identical to the Model 66, having two volumes, bass and treble, a two position tremolo speed switch and speed and depth controls. The green pilot light and the power and standby switchs are on the left side of the control panel.

The amp powers a Jensen P12P speaker.


220626 indicates that the speaker is a Jensen manufactured in the twentysixth week of 1956. This is the newest part in the amp, so I feel confident that this amp predates the Jazz series of amps. This amp is interesting in that it uses a "fixed" bias that supplies a negative voltage to the screens of the 6L6 output tubes. Most Guild amps that I have knowledge of use a cathode resistor to bias the tubes. The fixed bias method was not used by Guild until the Aaron Newman-designed Thunder series debuted in 1963.
After some limited playing time, I'm pleased with the tone of the amp, but it obviously needs some additional TLC. The tremolo caps are probably going to need replacement and most of the grounds need to be cleaned of almost sixty years of corrosion. The Jensen has a hole in the cone - I may just have it reconed instead.