Yes I saw that VM site also. If you search around a bit, you may be able to find that info without having to pay for it. The schematic inside the amp would be useful if you were able to get a good photo of it, and then post it in a readable form. A lot of old amps do get the sticky and gooey thing going on. Are you talking about the wires outside of the amp chassis itself or on the inside of the chassis? As long as the electrolytic caps have not leaked physically, then you are ok touching the insides of the amp. If they have leaked their electrolyte out, then that stuff is corrosive and the insides of the amp should be cleaned. You should also make sure to not touch the electrolyte yourself if at all possible. You should also make sure to not operate the amp until the electrolytic caps are replaced. If they have not leaked, it would still be a very good idea to replace all electrolytic caps in the amp. Age is not kind to them. Paper coupling caps also can degenerate, but these should be measured one by one to see if they are leaking DC on to the stages that follow them in the circuit. If they leak beyond about .3v then they shoul dbe replaced too. Any of this work can be dangerous inside the amp, so if you don't know what you are doing in order to be safe, take it to a tech.IHeartRics wrote:Thanks for all the info Greg. There is a web site dedicated to VM products where I could probably get the schematic. The one inside the cab will be "fun" to access. I'd try to have to take a photo of it and hope it comes out.soundmasterg wrote:Yes, the 6AU6 should have plenty of gain for you, but it is probably setup right now for lower gain. To change it over to a higher gain circuit, the parts around it, mainly the resistors would need to be changed to different values. In order to do this though. I would need a copy of the schematic to suggest changes, and would also need to know the current voltages in the amp at various points. Any competent amp tech would need the same info. That schematic on the side of the speaker box is very helpful, but won't have the voltages on it....those you would have to measure with a DMM. The 6AU6 in this amp is the preamp. The 12AU7 is the phase inverter, though it could be a cathodyne inverter (basically the same thing, just a different type of circuit), in which case half of the 12AU7 would be the driver tube and the other half would be the phase splitter. The EL84's are the power tubes, and this is mono from all appearences, so it is probably a 10-15 watt amp. The big transformer there is the pwoer transformer, and is quite large for a small amp such as this. It could have been setup to run some other device through those octal plugs on the side of the cabinet. Your schematic may tell you...but you have to be able to read it and understand it. The output transformer may be inside the chassis, but you would have to pull the chassis to see. If you do so, be careful not to touch any of the circuitry inside until you safely discharge the caps. They may still have high voltages on them.
A competent tech is probably your best bet. You probably aren't in my area (Portland, Oregon) but if you were I'd be happy to take a look at it.
Greg
If this helps, the input for the amp is a mono RCA cord to the volume pot, which is connected to another RCA cord, which plugs into an RCA jack on the amp (grey cord on the far right in the 3rd photo). The smaller octal plug runs to the on/off switch. The larger octal plug connects to the pilot lamp, speaker, and the treble/bass pots. Tracing these wires was gross, as their covering is getting sticky and gooey (plasticizers migrating out of the vinyl).
Oregon is a bit of a drive.But I appreciate the offer!
Greg
