I have this amp circa 1955 and is from an unknown, defunct company named Michael Musitronic and I’m trying to determine if I should fix it, sell it or modify it. It was in bad shape so I tried to fix it up but there is absolutely no info on this amp...tube compliment, schematic, old advertisement, nothing. I was able to piece together what I had and sketched out my own schematic of what was there but have no idea if it’s been modified.
It had a voltage doubler so no power transformer, 2 octal and 3 9-pin tubes, a small 6.3v 1.2a filament transformer, and is split between an upper chassis containing 2 9-pin preamp tubes and a lower chassis which has the phase inverter and 2 6V6’s. They are connected via an umbilical cord. The circuit is old school and makes sense in some ways and not in others. I’ve determined that it used 2 6V6's and 3 12AX7's (or similar) tubes and uses a cathodyne phase inverter. No circuit boards, just parts that fly across each other or mounted to what looks like a flat wire grid. Not very safe. OT is a universal type and I’m using a Fender Eminence 12” 8-ohm speaker.
I tried rebuilding the amp using a 300-0-300 CT transformer I had, got all the bias voltages correct and fired up the amp. As expected, the grounding is horrible. The preamp doesn’t distort but the tone stack sucks, is extremely tubby with tons of midrange bite, it has this weird circuit that shunts the volume pots to the next stage plate which sucks all the tone out of it. Finally, the circuit has problems where values seem incorrect. Everything works but is very distorted and nothing I tried seems to make any difference. I tried using a 12AY7 in the preamp and 12AU7 in the phase inverter and it helped only marginally. In general, this amp sounds bad. The more I modified to sound decent it the more it turned into a Deluxe which kind of tells me this early circuit is bad and probably why no one has ever heard of this beast.
Rather than redesign this circuit, I'm at the point of deciding whether to keep this original and sell it to let someone else have fun or have the fun myself and convert it to a Tweet 5G9 Tremolux, after all it does have all the right parts. One side of my brain feels bad about converting a piece of history, but the other side wants to have a decent sounding amp.
Does it sound like this thing is worth keeping in its current form simply because it’s old or should it just be sold as is? I’m inclined to build me a 5G9. Any thoughts on this would be helpful.