Princeton Reverb: Couple easy questions

  • Thread starter DennisM
  • Start date
  • This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links like Ebay, Amazon, and others.

DennisM

Tele-Meister
Joined
Nov 18, 2013
Posts
439
Age
69
Location
Nevada
I'm converting my PRRI PCB to hand wired.

1.On the 10pf, 250pf and 500pf, silver mica or ceramic disc? Or does it matter?

2. On the cap on the bias board, I'm having trouble finding a 25/100. Can I use a 50mf/100v instead without any problems?

3. What kind of tool do you use to tighten and loosen the big nut on the pilot light assembly? Danged if I can get anything on it.
 

Supertwang

Tele-Afflicted
Joined
Aug 10, 2014
Posts
1,412
Location
Indiana
1. I’d prefer silver mica
2.I think some Fenders have 100uf/100v bias cap so I’m pretty sure 50uf should be fine
3. I use soft-jawed plyers to remove the jewel light and regular small channel lock plyers to remove the light fixture nut
 

DennisM

Tele-Meister
Joined
Nov 18, 2013
Posts
439
Age
69
Location
Nevada
1. I’d prefer silver mica
2.I think some Fenders have 100uf/100v bias cap so I’m pretty sure 50uf should be fine
3. I use soft-jawed plyers to remove the jewel light and regular small channel lock plyers to remove the light fixture nut
Thanks. I just screw the jewel light on hand tight. I'll have to try the small channel locks on the big nut on the back.
 

GotA24Fretter

Tele-Holic
Joined
Jan 3, 2024
Posts
879
Age
38
Location
TX
1.On the 10pf, 250pf and 500pf, silver mica or ceramic disc? Or does it matter?
They'll perform nearly identically. A good quality ceramic cap is cheaper and more reliable than a low quality mica.

If you insist on mica, use heat sinking and work fast when installing them.
2. On the cap on the bias board, I'm having trouble finding a 25/100. Can I use a 50mf/100v instead without any problems?
The reissue you're reworking uses a 100μF. I've heard of cases where bias under filtering add hum to the signal. If you're going to use the same transformers, then expect to need to add a second cap to the bias input leg of the Intensity pot.
3. What kind of tool do you use to tighten and loosen the big nut on the pilot light assembly? Danged if I can get anything on it.
Tonecraft makes a specialty tool for this, but I'd imagine an adjustable wrench crows-foot would work fine, but better an appropriately sized open ended crows-foot.
 

Pete Farrington

Tele-Afflicted
Joined
Feb 18, 2023
Posts
1,716
Location
Staffordshire UK
.On the 10pf, 250pf and 500pf, silver mica or ceramic disc?
Ceramic caps aren't one thing.
There's maybe half a dozen different ceramic dielectric materials used, the particular one used for any particular cap depends on value, voltage, size, tolerance, voltage and temperature stability (coefficient), and microphony.
One cap product line might use different dielectrics to cover the range of values and voltages.
So to have a clue about what you're buying, the manufacturer's info must be checked, which means using a serious vendor that bothers to supply that info.
I just screw the jewel light on hand tight.
Whatever you end up using, it must be tight and secure. If the lamp assembly moves / rotates, the heater supply might get shorted to the chassis, which will cause trouble and, if there's a grounded heater CT, might wreck the mains transformer.
Even if tight, it's good practice to line the inside of the chassis around the lampholder with some type of insulation.
 
Last edited:

Nicko_Lps

Tele-Afflicted
Joined
Oct 10, 2021
Posts
1,284
Age
40
Location
Greece/Rhodes Island
I'm converting my PRRI PCB to hand wired.

1.On the 10pf, 250pf and 500pf, silver mica or ceramic disc? Or does it matter?

2. On the cap on the bias board, I'm having trouble finding a 25/100. Can I use a 50mf/100v instead without any problems?

3. What kind of tool do you use to tighten and loosen the big nut on the pilot light assembly? Danged if I can get anything on it.
It seems that your questions are already answered and i agree with all the answers but...

Why would you ruin the PCB to make it handwired? A pcb is generally better in terms of noise until it starts to self destruct because our tube amps have excessive heat that they cant handle for too long..

My humble idea is leave it as it is, when your PCB starts failing, you kick in and make it hand wired :)
 
Top