Hi all,
A friend of mine just found an untouched National Dobro amp, dates to about 1935. I was doing some research and I found a thread here which is pertinent because it addressed my only issue so far: The interstage transformer primary and secondary are both open, no good.
In the thread, Sluckey and others spoke about using a Hammond 124B transformer to substitute.
Here is that thread:
https://el34world.com/Forum/index.php?topic=32871.0Prior to me seeing the thread, I posted a question in an antique radios forum about my search for a substitute. A commenter suggested that Hammond transformer will not work without a lot of modifications that I do not feel qualified to attempt.
My main question is, who is correct? Is the consensus here that I can get away with the Hammond, or should I look elsewhere?
Here is the response I received on that other site:
Hammond make the 124 transformer in various form which is 10k:90k. And they sell just the wound bobbin, where a user might use their own laminations. The thing is though, in this application, the transformer has to supprt the DC current via the primary winding and the 124 types as they are , are not designed for that.
The way primary current is "supported" is either to have a large core cross sectional area or a type of core material that does not magnetically saturate easily (big transformer), or have a physical gap in the magnetic circuit. This is to prevent the core being pushed too far up its B-H curve and distortion and non linearity getting severe.
So you have a few options; you could check if the original laminations in your defective transformer will fit into the 124C bobbin and likely that would be ok. Or you could buy their finished 124A or 124B transformer, unstack it, and re-stack it as butt stacked with the E-I laminations together (not interleaved) and space those with a section of A4 paper. You would then have to check it with a frequency sweep injecting signal via a capacitor to the grid of the 56 tube and checking the amplitude response with the scope as you manually adjust the generator over the audio frequency spectrum, to check for satisfactory flat response.