Nahash5150 10,955 Posted February 1 Posted February 1 I may or may not do this...I'm having second thoughts. 'The guts just come out and go right into the new chassis...' Ha!!!!! It wouldn't be too bad if the transformers could just 'unplug' but they don't. Their wires travel everywhere...and that's real problem. There's no room for error - the wire lengths are precise. 3 transformers - each with 8 to 20 wires. All rivets have to be drilled out. All RCA jacks need to be replaced. The thing needs a severe cleaning and polishing. And the worst part - HUMAN HANDS. Previously worked on and it doesn't work. Worst problem ever. I'll need encouragement because I really want to say NO. 1 1 2
Charlie 18,114 Posted February 1 Posted February 1 If it were my decision I wouldn't touch it; too many booger solders and shade tree work going on... 2
Brian K. Totten 406 Posted February 2 Posted February 2 NEW! No Brainer! The new one looks so sweet! 1
Nahash5150 10,955 Posted February 2 Author Posted February 2 Correction - FxBill worked on it and he says it works...so...that is a bonus!
BobTFM35 3,039 Posted February 2 Posted February 2 Greg @Nahash5150 I don't know the back story on why this amp is on your bench. Lets say, its not a customer, but something that you sourced for your own use. If it was for a customer, I might have written the following differently. I did a little research on this amp and I've come to this conclusion. I just hope that I can explain it clearly. First the going price for this model, depending on the condition is maybe 3500 to 5000 (correct me if I'm wrong). That was the asking prices on ebay that I viewed. For discussion purposes lets say I can flip it for $4000.00 and I spend no more than 1200 for parts, don't know the bench time required so I can't factor that in, but it could still come out to be a nice profit. One of my first decisions is on availability of spare parts. You have a very nice Chrome chassis to work with. The vendor that I found for that chassis (and possibly the same one that the chassis was sourced from) also has some very nice reproduction pieces, such as the decals for the transformer covers and either a silver or gold badge 240 badge. For you sourcing the tube sockets, correct wire color and size would be no problem. The other sockets or holders for the metal caps (or whatever they are) I feel that you have the abilities to source them. The pots, depending on their condition, might take some reconditioning. Might need to see if replacements are available. I do know that for the dynaco amps there are a few vendors offering parts for restoration so maybe this is the case for the 240 amp. No doubt you have the wiring diagram for this unit so that would be a great source of encouragement to start with. I might start placing as much on the new chassis as possible such as the tube sockets, pots, and speaker terminal strips, some preliminary wiring with lengths long enough to be later adjusted, thus using the original chassis and schematic as a guide. I do know that you not only have the correct equipment but also the knowledge and experience to tackle this endeavor with a systematic approach, and that in Itself gives it a way better chance for success. Enough encouragement? You have this. 2
3M_Audio 2,263 Posted February 2 Posted February 2 I agree with @BobTFM35 regarding all the parts. The question in my mind would be the labor. There would be a *lot* of it. Your quote (from the customer, I assume) used the word "just". That would set off some alarms in my mind as it would indicate they are thinking it's a simple job that might take a couple of hours. I don't work very fast, but if I was estimating labor for the project I think I'd be at least 20 hours. Would the customer be OK with that bill? I bet they'd be shocked when they heard the number. Still, it looks like it would be a fun project. I have a soft spot in my heart for that vintage point-to-point wiring. It brings back memories of old Dynaco kits. 2
Nahash5150 10,955 Posted February 2 Author Posted February 2 Yeah - 20 hours is at the low end of time. I will not make any money on this. I have bills like anyone else - it's not about making money, it's about being responsible with it. I have to be very careful what work I take. If a project gets too demanding of my attention, other clients suffer. And I certainly do not want a shop full of unfinished projects that are over a year or two old. I told myself I would not do that... Anyway, fxbill is a great salesman. Looks like I'm doing it. For team Carversite...here we go... 2
Recommended Posts