1. In the photo below note the blue & brown OT input wires coming from the tubes are switched. This appears factory and perhaps it is OK they are switched without consequence? Or are they causing the power tubes to feed the wrong (or at least unexpected ) channel?
No not channels on the output, your amps output is mono even though you have 2 input channels.
The vast majority of guitar amps with 2 (or 4, 6 power tubes, 6L6's, 6V6's, EL34's....) are run in 'push pull' pairs. 1 tube (push) is for the top half of the signals sine wave and the other is for the bottom of the signals sine wave that are mixed together in the OT's secondary that feeds the speaker(s).
If the OT was changed then the blue/brown wires were not soldered up at Fender. They could be backwards, but most likely not, well if who ever put it in new what they were doing.
Tube power amps that use -FB (like yours does) if you get the OT primary wires backwards the -FB becomes +FB and the amp wont work/play/sound right. The easy way to check this out is to just temporarily disconnect the -FB wire. Guys like to leave these 2 wires a little long when the wire up an OT to make sure their correct then after they are sure they go back and trim them to the right length.
2. The EIA code (who knew there was such a thing) appears to indicate a quality maker, but a date of 1970?? That explains a few things, but not why the OT has 4 leads as opposed to the original, which it appears had only 2, correct? (black and green to the spkr jacks). So... what to make of the fact that 3 leads are now in use. Does the new OT have more "channels" ? How does that work exactly?
3. Also, Pete said "note that the tech decided that the replacement OT have more than one secondary speaker tap: note that he connected green tap to int. spk. jack and the green/yellow to ext. spk. jack. so the jacks are no longer common - so use one jack or the other and not both." [sorry, not seeing the quote function]
But I don't see how that EXT SPR jack will do anything as it only has 1 lead feeding it. Doesnt the hanging black wire need to be connected (perhaps over to the black on the main speaker jack?)
Pete already told you what the wires are, go back and reread reply#1
Your OT has a couple extra secondary load wires, might be wound with 4, 8 and 16ohm taps. Most Fender amps with a single speaker used an 8ohm speaker so they needed an OT with an 8ohm tap to match the speakers load. Most of their 2 speaker amps were set up at 4ohms, 2x8ohm speakers wired up in parallel = 4ohms. The OT's in those amps like a Twin Reverb, had OT's wound for a 4ohm secondary load tap.
Pete probably asked you to
post 'output transformer date and manufacturer codes' so he could look it up and confirm what is is and what the taps are including their color coding.
The speaker jacks in your amp are switchcraft open frame that ground themselves to the chassis. So when you solder up the OT secondary wire to a speaker jack the OT is now grounded. (There's a little more to it as 1 jack has a switch built into it and the other doesn't.) When the OT was changed because it has 3 different speaker load taps they chose 2 of the 3 and separated the 2 speaker jacks (no longer 2 in parallel) and left 1 tap unused.
Here's the link to Doug's tube amp library of information, lots of info in there to sort out a lot of your questions;
http://el34world.com/schematics.htm Brad
