Mystery find
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Mystery find
Hi Guys, picked this up last week. It will arrive this week. Besides great donor PT and OT and loaded with a 12” alnico... anyone familiar with this amp from 1946?
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Re: Mystery find
That looks like a great refurb project. What tubes does it use?
Tube junkie that aspires to become a tri-state bidirectional buss driver.
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Re: Mystery find
I will only know for sure of tube compliment when I receive the shipment. But it looks like a pair of RCA 6v6’s and maybe 6SN/L pre tubes. Will revert once I receive.
If it sounds good, it is good! Trust your ears
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Re: Mystery find
Looks like someone took a grinder to the trans corner.
What Happened?
Who let the magic smoke out?
Who let the magic smoke out?
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Re: Mystery find
Now that you pointed that out.. it looks like both trannies have been subjected to a grinder!!! Might have something to dude with the cabinet.Coyotesgator wrote: ↑Tue Jan 22, 2019 7:10 pm Looks like someone took a grinder to the trans corner.
If it sounds good, it is good! Trust your ears
Re: Mystery find
Well it is a Wizard so it should have a great AC/DC tone. I guess this must be the first one. Lol
If Hendrix had lived would he have been as good as EDDIE? (Shaver that is)
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Re: Mystery find
Well.... I picked up the delivery today and had a quick peek at the wizard. The cabinet is made out of VERY thin ply
!! The amp is from 1946. The power amp looks to have TWO mains transformers that look to be original. I would think that one was for powering the original field=coil speaker? (Seems too large). The transformer underneath, is the OT. Will revert with more details and pics over the weekend.
Have a great weekend!
Have a great weekend!
If it sounds good, it is good! Trust your ears
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Re: Mystery find
Some pics of the bigger of the two PT’s. Looks to be 350-0-350 @ 120ma.
This PT was located next to the rectifier (5U4) and power switch and fuse.
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If it sounds good, it is good! Trust your ears
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Re: Mystery find
The smaller of the two PT’s looked like this (325 0 325 @100ma), and was connected to a 0Z4 rectifier (cold cathode), and had this “VIBRATOR”, which I have never seen before (dont know what it does)!
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- martin manning
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Re: Mystery find
Looks like it has two high voltage supplies, so it can run from a 6V DC source. Vibrators were common in auto radios and home radios when no AC power was available. It's a low frequency electromechanical switch mode power supply.
Re: Mystery find
That electro-mechanical vibrator was commonly used in autos with a 6V battery system and a tube radio. The vibrator was part of the radio. It would take 6VDC and chop it up by vibrating a switch contact, which produced a rough square wave AC voltage that was fed into a transformer. The transformer would step up the voltage which would then be rectified to produce B+ voltages suitable to operate the tubes in the radio.
That vibrator kinda suggests that the wizard could also be operated from a battery.
That vibrator kinda suggests that the wizard could also be operated from a battery.
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Re: Mystery find
Thanks Martin and Slucky. Does that mean the second smaller but still beefy PT does not have a 240v primary?martin manning wrote: ↑Fri Jan 25, 2019 12:04 pm Looks like it has two high voltage supplies, so it can run from a 6V DC source. Vibrators were common in auto radios and home radios when no AC power was available. It's a low frequency electromechanical switch mode power supply.
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Re: Mystery find
BTW.. this smaller OT looks cool from WODEN
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Re: Mystery find
That would be my guess.Does that mean the second smaller but still beefy PT does not have a 240v primary?