What is written on the back of the pot to tell whether it's linear or audio taper? There are no indications on either schematic that I have.
Thanks for the information on the knobs. Hopefully I can find some.
EDIT: It appears that the knobs sources have dried up. George is not active on the forum any longer, and Dave Kiptka does not show up as a seller on eBay. Maybe Dave's name is misspelled.
There should be some numbers on the side of the pot....indicating the value....you may also see an A or B...A indicates a log pot and B indicates linear in most cases, though read the below quote from wikipedia....
A letter code may be used to identify which taper is used, but the letter code definitions are not standardized. Newer potentiometers will usually be marked with an 'A' for logarithmic taper or a 'B' for linear taper. Older potentiometers may be marked with an 'A' for linear taper, a 'C' for logarithmic taper or an 'F' for anti-logarithmic taper. The code used also varies between different manufacturers.Remove the death cap as Ryan noted. it makes a difference in the buzzing of the amp because you are still using a 2 wire plug which is not grounded.
On my old 200S I took out the accessory outlet and the existing cord and cut out the chassis a bit to install a standard IEC plug that I could then plug a standard power cable into. I did this because I think having an attached power cord on a head without something to wrap it around is dumb and an IEC plug makes more sense. I also did this because I didn't have the proper D shaped punch to enlarge the hole for the proper size 3 wire power cord. You can drill a new hole with a stepped drill bit and it will work, but the round hole doesn't hold the cord that well and a hard yank can sometimes pull it out. Also the proper D shaped punch is like $500 for a Greenlee.
If you rewire the amp for proper 3 wire operation, the death cap should go and the ground switch should be disconnected. I used the ground switch in my amp as a ground lift switch and rewired the rest of the amp so all the grounds were isolated from the chassis except through the ground switch. it is a LOT of work and I don't recommend it unless someone really wants to do it or needs to use the amp in a situation where that would be useful. If you just do the standard setup and change to a 3 wire and disconnect the ground switch and get rid of the death cap, then you should be ok....however the proper way of connecting the wires in a 3 wire can't be done on the Sunn because then the light in the power switch will not work anymore. So just rewire it up to 3 wire and connect as it is now to the light on the power switch and the amp will work fine.
The proper way to do a 3 wire conversion is to have the hot (black wire in the US) wired to the fuse, then the switch, then one power transformer lead. The neutral (white wire in the US) wire should go direct to the other power transformer lead. The ground (green wire in the US) wire should go directly to it's own bolt on the chassis at least an inch away from any other grounds and with some slack so if the cord gets pulled out it will be the last thing that stays connected. But as I said you can't do it this way in the Sunn unless you want to lose the power light function, so you have to stick with one side going to the switch and the other going to the fuse. It will work and is safe but is not as good as the other way.
Greg