Categories
Guitar Equipment Technical

‘The guy told me that it has a bad power transformer, and he’s some kind of genius’

Of all the non-PCB tube amps that Fender ever made, the one most likely to rot away unloved in some dude’s attic is probably the Bassman 100.  Too wimpy to be a useful bass amp, too loud to be a good studio guitar amp, and too boring for anyone to give a shit about, the Bassman 100 is just begging to be a parts-donor for someone else’s broken Twin Reverb.  Naturally, when I saw one at the flea market this weekend, I couldn’t resist buying it.

The seller told me, plainly, that is it needed work; “It hums and buzzes; the guy said it needs a power transformer.”  ‘The Guy’ in this case was apparently an electrical engineer who worked for CBS and held several patents?  Some kind of electronics genius, I was told?  Cum Grano Salis, as the senator said, but I was scared enough that I almost didn’t buy it.   Because there are only two parts in a 100-watt tube amp that are expensive to replace: the power transformer and the output transformer.  In that case of an 100-watt tube amp as undesirable as a Bassman 100, either of those conditions would make it literally not-worth-fixing.   The seller, whom I deal with often, agreed to take it back in a week if I insisted.  Fair enough.  $140 crosses the table.

As I have commented on before, a tube amp that buzzes and hums is not a bad thing; the fact that it is making sound at all means that at least the power transformer, rectifier, output tubes, and output transformer are working.  The rest of the stuff is cheap enough that it shouldn’t be a major deterrent.

I took the thing back to the shop, plugged it in, and guess what: not only did it hum, but it worked, and it was loud.  It was loud and it was making bad smells and blowing fuses in 30 seconds also.  So oh-keeee…   Here’s what needed to be done to get this thing back to ship-shape condition (and no, it did not involve a new power transformer).

This one is gonna be long, and very technical, so please click the link below to READ ON if yr so inclined… (short story: the amp worked great and sounded great after about 3 hours of work and $50 of parts…)

Categories
Guitar Equipment

Yamaha Electric Guitars and Basses Complete Catalog c. 1981

Pretty good one for y’all today.  Click below to download the complete 20pp Yamaha Electric Guitars and Basses Catalog circa 1981:

DOWNLOAD: Yamaha_Guitars_1981

Models covered, with text, photos, and detailed specs (chart at end of catalog) include: Yamaha SBG3000, SBG2000, SGB1000, SBG500 guitars; Yamaha SSC500, SHB400, SC600, SC400, SA2000, and SA800 guitars; Yamaha BB2000, BB1200S, BB1000S, and BB400 electric basses.

Above: the Yamaha SBG3000, flagship model of the range, and still highly desirable; the most recent example to sell online went for $2075.

For whatever reason, products of the Yamaha corporation have always played a large role in my musical life.  Growing up, my folks’ house contained: a Yamaha baby grand, a Yamaha dreadnought, a Yamaha alto saxophone, three sets of Yamaha hi-fi speakers (I still have the NS30s, and they still sound great).  The first electric instrument I ever bought was a $40 Yamaha bass, beat-up but functional; at 16 I was the owner of a circa 1980 Yamaha SG1500, identical to the SBG2000 pictured at the left save for dot fret markers.  I played it through a solid-state Yamaha combo amp, their version of a Fender Super; 60 watts with four 10s.  Each of these circa 1980 pieces was purchased at East Coast Music mall for around $200 each.  Christ anyone remember that place?  If yr not from “round here,” take a gander at the clip below and you’ll get a pretty good idea of what the place was like.  Oh this one nvr gets old…

No idea what happened to that Yamaha amp, but I am pretty sure that my former SG1500 is still on offer, after nearly twenty years, at the legendary MUSIC GUILD in Danbury CT.  How is this possible?  If yr ever there, check out the price they are asking. LOL for reals.  NEways…  even these days I have plenty of Yamaha in my life: at home I play a U3 piano, which is probably the best thing shy of a baby grand or grand; I do all of my music recording and mixing at home with Yamaha HS50s, which I continue to recommend to absolutely anyone looking for good inexpensive compact speakers; and at Gold Coast Recorders we’ve got a few Yamaha pieces that get a lot of use too, from a very nice older MIJ Nylon-string to the venerable CP70 Electric Grand Piano.  As I sit here typing this, my eye just landed on a set of 1980s Yamaha PTT1 electronic drums over in the corner…oh yeah then there’s my Yamaha CS01, their amazing little circa 1980 mini analog monosynth… it’s just one of those brands I can’t get away from.

Above: the Yamaha SC600 and SC400

The Yamaha SHB400

For more Yamaha vintage gtr coverage on PS dot com, click here…   and for complete information on their circa 1980 Keyboard line-up, click here…

Categories
Guitar Equipment Technical

This Was A Home For Animals

Above: the result of five-hours work on a dead, dead, dead Univox 50-watt tube bass head.  This model was originally designated the E-3 or the U-1236 (click here for the schematic).   It was made in 1968, and it’s similar to a blackface Fender Bassman in many ways: fixed bias 50Watt output with a pair of 6L6s, 12Ax7 and 12AU7 preamp tubes, volume, bass, and treble controls, and a pair of switches marked ‘Sharp’ and ‘Deep.’  These switches are similar to the ‘Bright’ and ‘Deep’ switches that you would find on the two separate input channels of a Fender amp.  Unlike the Bassman, the Univox uses an unusual additional balanced voltage amp between the phase inverter and the power stage.  The Univox is also single-channel, it lacks middle and presence controls, and the power supply uses a voltage doubler.

Above, the Univox as I originally found it in a filthy old garage.  It came with an empty pro-quality 2×15 ported instrument speaker cabinet; $45 was the total price.  A bit steep, I admit, but I was feeling optimistic I suppose. I think a fair price for this thing would have been somewhere between ‘FREE’ and $25.  Oh did I mention that it had no tubes in it either?  I declined to take the speaker cabinet and it’s probably in a landfill now somewhere.  Just can’t save ’em all…

Hey there!  Here’s the horrifying scene I encountered when I removed the single (incorrect) screw that was holding the chassis into the cabinet.  What you are seeing is a heartwarming combination of acorn shells, spider eggs, and ants. Long after this thing ceased to be a device capable of amplifying audio, it had a second life as home for wayward animals.  Let the crack fox explain. (click text at left for direct link; full video below).

Oh yeah so – the horrifying part?  Look at how this thing is constructed: a (basically non-removable) circuit board!  With half of it obscured by sheet metal.  This ain’t gonna be easy.  Feeling a little less optimistic at this point…

Above: the reverse side of the chassis (which was remarkably clean) after allllll of the repairs were completed.  Here’s what it took:

*When I found an appropriate-sized fuse cap and tubed the thing up, I attached the test speaker and I got… hummmmmmmm.  That’s it.  Lots of hum.  Now as a younger fellow this would have discouraged me, but I’ve learned better.  Hum may suck but it is SOUND, so at least the power transformer, rectifier, and output stage is relatively operational.

*I measured the voltages throughout the power supply – they were way off.  One of the (factory-original) filter caps was so, so drastically underrated – 150v whereas it needed to handle at least 300v – so it’s a miracle this thing ever worked at all.  Replaced all the filter caps (and the bias cap) and voila – some audio, a tiny, tiny bit,  was passing from the input and the tone controls seemed to work.  The B+ points were now also reading within appropriate ranges.

*After replacing the bias cap, the bias was reading 20v whereas the schematic indicated -32v.  I was also getting two different readings at the 6L6 grids.  I suspected the coupling caps, and sure enough, they were shot.  replaced those and bias was now -28v and balanced.  I little lower than the schem, but so was the B+ overall so probably correct.

*Next: started checking the B+ at every plate.  ALL THREE 47K plate-load resistors were shot.  As was EVERY SINGLE coupling cap in the amp.  Replaced all of that stuff and the amp was working alright.  Some hum, the tone sucked, but it was loud.

*As I was checking some voltages around the chassis I saw some sparking inside the output transformer.  The O/T is a paper/wire wound unit with no potting or wrap whatsoever – the coils are completely exposed.  Not a good idea.  Anyhow, something, moisture, dirt, who knows, had gotten inside of it, and now that it was putting out some real current, it was starting to burn up.  I had a spare output transformer (vintage US made unit from a discarded PA head) with the same turns ratio, same size and weight, so I threw that in.  Now the amp sounded great!  Almost done…

*Last steps: removed the two-prong A/C cord and the ‘Death Cap,’ replaced the DPDT power/standby switch (the original switch was intermittent), and put in a better-matched pair of output tubes (a pair of old Sylvania 5881s).  I used 50s RCAs for the preamp.  Hum is totally gone, everything works great.  It’s really a great-sounding amp now – loud, versatile controls, and so small and light for a 50W head.  Pretty good, pretty neat…

As far as the cosmetics go: one of the original knobs was missing and I didn’t have an identical unit in stock, so I replaced all three with some vaguely period-correct Japanese knobs.  I also didn’t have a Univox logo plate to replace the missing original, so I added a name plate from the random-logo-drawer onto the front of the amp just because it looked a little odd with nothing there.  Univox is now ready to go, much better than it was from the factory: better caps, better output trans, and much better tubes too.  If this had been a repair for a customer, the bill would have been around $400 for parts and labor (assuming I used new Chinese or Russian tubes and a new O/T).  $400 is clearly too much for a sensible person to spend on repairing a piece like this, as the street value for a properly working unit is only about $350.  Had someone other than an amplifier serviceman purchased this thing, it probably would have gone into the trash or into another garage for the next 45 years.  Now, if the Univox had been wired and assembled like a Fender amp, on a turret board, the repair would have taken half as much time and the repair could have been vaguely cost-effective.   It was the goddamn awkward circuit board that made it take so long to re-fit. Proof yet-again that repairman-friendly construction practices do add significantly to the service-life of an amplifier.

Categories
Guitar Equipment Technical

Supro Supreme Gtr Amp Overhaul

A customer (J) sent me this wonderfully-preserved Supro amplifier to overhaul.  It is a Supreme Model from circa 1950.  Long-time readers may recall that this is the same amplifier model that I scratch-built a few years back as part of my ‘Field Coil Guitar Amp’ article.  Click here for that earlier piece, which contains links to the schematic as well as lots of information what makes these early Supros such interesting pieces. J had purchased this amp sight-unseen from the original owner, based largely on its excellent styling and strong cosmetic condition.  It came with a matching lap-steel electric guitar.  It was sold to him as ‘working,’ but what does that really even mean as far as a sixty-year-old tube amp is concerned? Anyhow, he received the amp, it sounded terrible, and he sent it me.  Here’s what I did to bring it back to it good-as-new.  Probably a little better.

Above, a view inside the chassis after most of the work was performed.  Since this is a field-coil amp, there are several wires running to and from the speaker/field/output trans, so it was quickest to perform the work at this slightly awkward angle.  When I received the amp, it did in fact pass audio at a decent volume level, but there were some obvious deficiencies.  The volume seemed to be a little low; there were some intermittent crackling sounds; and the sound was distorted at any volume level.  The voltages were also all over the place.  There was an expected 350 vdc coming off of the rectifier, but the voltage fell to 150 after the first filter stage.

First things first: change the filter caps.  Even if the original filter caps were not the problem, they are sixty years old, and J bought this thing in order to use it live, so reliability is paramount, and filter caps are cheap so long as you use the small plastic single-units as I did above (as opposed to paying $40 for one of those identical-fit newly-manufactured multi-caps).  I disconnected all wires going to the original multi-cap and left it in place.

Next: that crackling sound.  In my experience, this is generally caused by aged pre-amp plate-load resistors.  These resistors drop a LOT of voltage (which they do by turning it into heat) and they don’t last forever.  Changed all of those out and the crackling went away.

Now about that low B+ reading and the constant distortion: I had noticed that the volume pot had a slight crackle to it.  This can be caused by one of two things: dust and/or mechanical failure in the pot itself, or there could be DC voltage present at the pot.  The coupling capacitor ahead of the pot is supposed to block this DC, but these are 60 years old ain’t they.  After a quick spray of contact cleaner the crackle was still there, exactly the same.  I put the DC meter on the input of the pot and sure enough: 2 volts were present.  This is not a lot (I’ve measured as much as 25 volts here in amps that are actually in-service) but it’s enough to cause some noise.  I replaced the coupling cap with a Sprague Orange Drop (the big orange thing in the photo above) of the same spec and done.  Noise was gone.  The pot actually worked fine and did not require replacement.

Anyhow, the fact that this coupling cap had failed lead me to believe that the other similar caps in the amp were also suspect.  And as it turns out, the two .02 coupling caps feeding the grids of the 6V6 power tubes were VERY leaky: I measured 22 volts+ present at the grids of those tubes.  Since this is a cathode-biased amp, I would expect to see 0 volts DC at this point and around 20 volts present at the cathode.  Instead what we had was an amp with a 100% bias error.  It’s amazing that it worked at all.  The 22 volts present at the grids of the 6V6s meant that they were drawing a TON of current, which explained the low B+ reading.

Replaced those paper caps with a pair of Spragues and that solved all the remaining problems.  The amp now had the expected voltage readings all around and it sounded great.

Above, the sweaty, disfigured, overall funky coupling caps that had gone so wrong.  I can’t tell you how many amps I see that have bad coupling caps in them.  It’s funny that so many guitar players, even those who couldn’t tell a filter cap from a resistor, will talk about replacing filter caps etc etc how much it improves an amp etc.  Now, this is true, but old coupling caps are just as likely to need replacement.  And unlike filter caps, it’s very easy to tell if a coupling cap has gone bad.  Does it pass DC?  Replace it.

So what else did this lil Supro get?  New matched JJ 6V6s, to start with.  I auditioned several NOS 6SC7s in the phase inverter position and none of them made any difference, so I left that tube and the rectifier tube alone.  The 6J7 preamp tube sounded fine, but I was curious how much improvement could be gotten there, so I put in a 1620 (special selected low-noise 6J7 variant) and there was a marked reduction in white noise and less hum too (hum level had been low after the re-cap but now it was nearly gone).  I added a grounded, 3-wire AC cable, removed the ‘death cap’ from the AC primary, and bolted it all back together.  The amp sounds fantastic.  Really, really great.  Much better, in all honesty, to my DIY’d version, although how much of that is due to the speaker I’ll never know.  I’ll end on this note: people seem to be under the impression that these old Valcos and Supros are somehow low-budget, cheaply made, etc., but I found quite the opposite to be true.  This piece was extremely well-constructed, with very high-quality components throughout, and the soldering work was nearly flawless.  For a very small amp that only weighs about 15 lbs, it’s loud, clear, and dynamic, and overall just a very cool alternative to a tweed fender deluxe for about 1/4 the price.

It’s very easy to service a previously-working amplifier that has ‘suddenly stopped working.’  I plug it in and start measuring the voltages, starting from the power transformer primary, on to the secondaries, then to the B+ supply, etc, the tube plates, the cathodes, etc., until I find a voltage that looks off.  The component failure will likely be somewhere at that point.  On the other hand, an old amp that ‘works’ but which has numerous deficiencies (crackles, hums, noise, distortion) can seem a little more daunting, but if one employs a similarly systematic approach, all issues will eventually reveal themselves.  Even if a technician doesn’t have the service data on a particular amp, they have become familiar (through studying many amp schematics that do have test voltages indicated) with the kind of readings that one would expect to see on the grids, plates, and cathodes of various tube amp circuits.  That’s a good place to start.  The rest of it – learning which components are likely to fail, and what the symptoms of these failures are – learning all that stuff just takes time.

 

Categories
Guitar Equipment

1967

The Selmer Varitone Saxophone amplification system circa 1967.  Click here for previous coverage on PS dot com.  I once bought a few of the lil cigarette-pack-sized belt-mount preamp units; they make the most fantastic fuzz sounds when used with gtr or bass.  Long gone to the eBay wilds…

Heathkit rock-band hardware circa 1967, including Heath-distributed Rocket, Silhouette, and ‘Deluxe’ Harmony guitars.  Also on offer: Heathkit TA-16 solid-state guitar amp.  Click here and here for more Heathkit coverage on PS dot com. 

Categories
Guitar Equipment

You’ll Want More Than One

US Marshall Amplifiers Print-ad circa 1979

An advertising executive told me a great story about Arm & Hammer Baking Soda once.  He was working on a new round of adverts and the client was frustrated with trying to figure our how to increase sales.  It seems that most folks were buying a box every year to ‘freshen’ their fridge but how could they be encouraged to buy more? At this point, someone had the idea to encourage consumers to buy one for the fridge, and one for the freezer.  If you have a useful products that consumers like, perhaps the next logical step is to convince those consumers that they need to buy More Than One.

Marshall JCM800 advert circa 1983

Categories
Guitar Equipment

Misc Electric Guitar Bits circa 1980

BC Rich Bich advert 1979.  Just in case you weren’t sure what the shape of the instrument is intended to mimic.  

Doing some PD dot com housecleaning today and I came across all of these lil’ orphan-ads for random bits of circa ’80 guitar technology.  Happy Friday.

Joe Perry promotes Bill Lawrence pickups circa 1981.  This would have been during the JOE PERRY PROJECT era.  I have never heard passive pickups with more output than Bills.

Not so much an electric-guitar ad but rather an anti-electric guitar ad.  Guild Dreadnought circa 1980.

Hohner electric guitars circa 1979.  I am guessing that these are Asian-made instruments but I can’t say for sure… that Epiphone-Wilshire-esque thing on the left is pretty intriguing…

Ovation Deacon…

…and Viper circa 1979.

Gibson RD, ES, and Les Paul ‘Artist’ lineup of 1979.  These instruments had active electronics, including an on-board compressor.

Categories
Guitar Equipment

The Travis Bean TB1000 of 1975

Most iconic of the 70’s ‘aluminum guitars,’  the Travis Bean line up continues to remain a valuable collector’s item.  Famous players include Duane Dennison from this classic band.  You can see a more detailed list at this link.  I briefly played the much crappier Kramer aluminum-necked instrument from the same era; it had a terrible two-bolt neck joint that never seemed to stay tight. Frequent unintentional chorus-ing would result.  Any TB fans out there?

Categories
Guitar Equipment

Interesting Guitar Effects of the 1970s

Rowe-DeArmond offers a volume-pedal sized for funky, funky boots. 

Today at PS dot com: some interesting odds n ends from the audio-effects pedal market of the 1970s.  If yr using any of these boxes in the studio or on stage these days, drop a line and let us know…

The Binson EchoRec, an electro-mechanical audio delay system that used a rotating disc rather than moving tape or oilItalian built; marketed and distributed by Guild in the US (much like Guild distributed the earlier Watkins CopyCat).  The EchoRec is best known as being the 70’s delay unit of choice of this dude, who certainly created a lot of significant sounds with it. 

Hawk Effects: designed to hang off yr guitar strap rather than sit on the floor.  I have never seen one of these in the flesh (steel).  Anyone?  The Mushrooms look threatening.

The Studer tape machine is the stove; Ibanez effects are the spice. Got it.  Compressor II, Phase Tone, Graphic Equalizer, Tube Screamer, etc…

Korg X-911 Guitar Synthesizer.  Is this an actual synth with a pitch-to-CV convertor on the input (like my beloved MS20) or a complex filter/distortion unit?

The Ludwig Phase II.  Not an actual synthesizer, but pretty far out regardless.  I remember seeing Thurston Moore using one of these back in the 90s.  Check it out here

Ross effects, from the man who brought you Kustom.  Wow I love this graphic design.  The only unit from this lineup to attain classic status is the Compressor; these trade for high sums due to their close association with one of the most visible guitarists of the 1990s.  Read this crazy story for the details….

Categories
Guitar Equipment

Ole’ Ibanez part 2: Lawsuit era and beyond

Above: The Ibanez Double Axe lineup circa 1974.  Bass/Guitar, 12 string/Guitar, and Guitar/Guitar models.

Today as PS dot com: a few more interesting bits of Ibanez history.  Last week’s Ibanez-early-eighties post brought a tremendous number of new visitors to the site courtesy of Ibanez USA, who found us and spread the word.  See here for that post.  Hope y’all enjoyed yr visit; here’s some more for ya.

An interesting phenomenon to note: although the 70’s ‘lawsuit’ Ibanez Gibson-copies were sold as lower-cost alternatives to American-made instruments, time has been kind to them: prices for set-neck 80’s Ibanez guitars are now often close to that of 70’s Gibsons.  This is partly due to rarity, but I think we’ve also begun to collectively embrace the idea that ‘copies’ are more desirable than ‘originals’ in some sense; in a world of endless duplications, fakes, and forgeries, the unapologetic ‘copy’ can actually seem more authentic than a supposed ‘original.’

The Ibanez Rocket-Roll Flying-V copy circa 1974

After Ibanez was compelled to cease US distribution of their Gibson copies, we see some interesting new lines to emerge.  This ‘Studio Series’ was part of the Alembic-inspired ‘hippie sandwich’ guitar-style of the mid/late 1970s. 

Follow this link for more 70’s Ibanez coverage on Preservation Sound dot com.