I finally got my Thunderbolt, a 1966 diode-rectified model. It is in great cosmetic shape and reasonably well cared-for electronically. It has all new electrolytics, mostly original signal caps and resistors, and the original output transformer. The power transformer has been "upgraded" to a Mercury magnetics model, which, judging by the several holes drilled in the chassis, is not the first replacement power transformer this amp has seen. In any case, the power transformer seems to work fine, the installation was proficient, and the amp sounds great with its original Jensen speaker.
I did have a few questions regarding this amp, and I know they're somewhat common here so hopefully someone can help out.
The original speaker connector was some sort of two-pin thing (I've seen it referred to as a "DIN 41529"). Someone has left the female side of the connector installed in the amp, but apparently lost the male part, as the speaker wires are just soldered straight to the connector. I know it makes no functional difference, but it would make me happy to reunite the amp with its proper male counterpart. Can anyone confirm the name of this connector and possibly provide a source?
This is the first amp I've come across with no screen resistors. I will mostly be playing it loud. Is it worth installing some for safety, or is this a case of "the amp has been perfectly fine without for 60 years, leave it alone"? Is it going to eat tubes?
Someone has installed a cathode bypass cap on the power tubes. This does not appear in the original schematics, but is nearly ubiquitous in the cathode biased amps that I've worked on. Does anyone have experience with this circuit with/without the bypass cap?
Somebody has previously modified it to cascade the unused triode into the original first triode using the switching jack arrangement in the attached schematic (also reference in this topic:
https://el34world.com/Forum/index.php?topic=26084.0). I like both available sounds and intend to leave it as is. My question is this: is it possible to use an A/B footswitch attached to both inputs and be able to switch between the two inputs on the fly? My intuition is that having a cable plugged into that switching jack will break the connection and not allow the signal to pass from the boost stage. Is there another input jack arrangement that would allow this?
The original output transformer is pretty ugly. My experience with 60s era uncovered output transformers is that they always look like something out of a horror movie, but this one looks somehow
worse. It seems to work fine, but something appears to have melted or seeped out. Do you see anything concerning in the attached photo?
Some discussions I can find on the internet reference a ground wire that is connected between the amp chassis and the shielding plate inside the cabinet. Mine has no such wire, but seems reasonably quiet and not hummy. Should I install this, and if so, where would it have made these connections in the original amp?
Thanks in advance for your help. I'm sure to have more questions as I get deeper into this thing.