What PT would you put in a 5g9? What about a 5e9a?
Background: I've built a couple amps (5f2a, BFPR). I'm no electrical engineer; I barely get Ohm's law. I can work safely around high voltage, I can solder, and I can build from a layout and schematic. Understanding the electron, not so much.
My research suggests both originals (and def the 5g9) ran a Triad 8160. Physically these are pretty big, like 3.44 x 2.75 bolt centers, which seems to fit the standard cutout in the similar-chassis tweed Super, Pro, etc.
Electrically the 8160 seems a bit mysterious. Items:
- Fender's scheme for the 5g9 shows 300V AC to each side of its 5U4GB and is fixed bias. Their layout for the cathode-biased 5e9a shows 395V from its 5Y3 to the first filter cap.
- An expensive modern PT said to be a copy of the 8160 comes in both 350-0-350 and 320-0-320 versions. I speculate these might be intended for the 5e9a and the 5g9, respectively. It's rated at 160ma -- I have no idea what the original was.
Many modern PTs even for 5e3 seem to put out more B+ but are physically smaller. For current, many are either closer to 100ma or something like 220.
Ideally I'd find a PT that fit in the standard (big) cutout but gave me the right power and current handling to recreate a tweed tremmie. (FWIW I'm probably most likely build a 5g9). Also ideally I wouldn't have to rig Zeners or other fixes to get the right B+. And in a perfect world I wouldn't have to use a PT with a total medusa of different-colored primaries and secondaries to give me the right voltage. But folks who've built 5g9s especially say the right PT voltage (not too high) is key.
As examples I've looked at, the ClassicTone 40-18029 or Hammond 290DX appear to be at least the right physical size. I'm not dying to buy the expensive modern PT mentioned above. What would you suggest?