Great looking build love it!!.. I'll bet that took a while.. Congrats and solder on
Tony
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
California, yes. This one, no. I could be wrong but I believe B.Y. still has it?Oh, I gave a NOS transformer in orig box away a couple of months ago. This one? California, right?
Man I love getting old boxes of goodies like that.UltraHookedOnPhonix wrote:Thanks fellas!
A local ham radio guy was selling a bunch of stuff and he had a NOS R-2C for $10! The bell of the transformer even had a protective sleeve made of paper around it. They sure don’t make em’ like that anymore!
[IMG855]http://i205.photobucket.com/albums/bb17 ... n/R-2C.jpg[/img]
After noticing the date code on the transformer, my hopes for a non-smoking start-up faded rather quickly. But in the end, 42 years of solitary confinement was all it needed to start up without issues.
Triad made the R-2C for VTVMs and produced them for 41 years (1951-1992). Given that it was produced for so long I would think they'd still be around in abundance on the used/surplus market. Probably being horded somewhere!![]()
Thanks again for the kind words!
Been there, done that. Now, if I'm struck with insomnia and feel a need to solder 'round midnight, I at least put on some pajama pants.UltraHookedOnPhonix wrote:Thanks Tony! Yeah, it took some time getting all the "right" parts together but the soldering part was pretty painless...with the distinct exception of having molten solder connect with bare skin.
"Solder in shorts and you'll get torched!"...I can't rime for %$@#
Thanks Argonaut!Outstanding build, Phonix. I really like your boards and the details on the face. It must have been awesome to find an original tranny. That's beyond cool. Congrats!
No, not on this one thankfully! The previous one I build had the in, send, return and out jacks all grounded to the chassis as well as the pots (like the real one). Your solution seems to be what Dumble did on the one Funk posted pics of. You can clearly see that the coax shield for the recovery inputs wiper is not connected. I could probably have done the same thing instead of insulating the jacks and grounding them at the pots but it worked nonetheless.Just curious, did you have any ground loop noise like problems when you first fired it up?
I had one cable that I had to snip the ground on, not sure what it was about but since that killed the noise I just went on with it.
Ha Ha!!! TOWLTWB!!! Hillarious!I suppose the one who likes to walk barefoot still has it.
I did not need it as I build these units into my amps. Works for me.
I didn’t use a wire stripper because I’ve found that the one I have is not so reliable with thicker AWG cable. I used an X-acto knife to expose the shield layer, then I “fan-out” the braided shield for the length I’m going to use while being careful not to push or pull on it. Then, simply trim the excess off.Hey this question is for you guys that ground your cable shields to the back of the pots like HAD did.
How in the heck do you get that shield trimmed so nice and neat back away from the center insulator?
Not sure is UHOP used Teflon cable but if not, how do you keep the center from melting when soldering?
Heh Heh…right on!Been there, done that. Now, if I'm struck with insomnia and feel a need to solder 'round midnight, I at least put on some pajama pants.
Thanks!angelodp wrote:Whats a beauty. Can you comment on the sonic differences in this build ( I have a near clone of your first build ) and which components you varied.
cheers Ange
Thank’s Paul, that’s very nice of you!Guitarman18 wrote:Phonix,
I thought that the quality of your BM build was outstanding, but this build beats that. I can't recall seeing a more authentic D'clone, in all the years I've been at TAG. A fantastic achievement, you should be very proud.
The only downside to seeing your work, is realising that I need to 'up my game'.![]()
Thanks for sharing.
Cheers,
Paul.