A friend of mine and I fired it up and it had a very loud HUM! Volume didn't change the level so we figured it had a ground loop. We pulled the amp and found someone did a hack job on it. The bias cap was gone, the resistor accross the pre-amp power socket was gone, there were other gounding and wiring issues as well. The GZ-34 rectifier tube was replaced with a 5U4 and there was a bad pre-amp tube, a 12AT7 instead of a 12AX7! I think that's it. Oh, the amp power cord was replaced and instead of a 3 amp fuse it had a 32 volt 4 amp fuse! I'm not quite sure how it worked at all???
We did cure the hum but the volume is too low? It blew the the 3 amp 250 volt fuse we put in after about 10 minutes of operation. It is certainly a work in progress! For the time it did play, it was very, very clean!
The pots and filter caps are dated Jan/Feb of 1966. The pre-amp housing was obviously "home made" by the uneven sharp cuts on the aluminum sheeting. Looks like they used tin snips or something similar to cut it, how cool is that! The pre-amp appears to have been un-touched inside. Sure was a pain in the a** getting it out of the cabinet! Pots are noise free which is a good thing.
I am still trying to reduce the resolution of my pictures but have had no success. Hopefully I can get my daughter to help me with that in a couple of days.
Any input would be appreciated!
Thanks,
Mark