P
P. Glaser
New member
PM Sent.Well, the wait's worn me out... if anyone would like to buy a 73 pre and an ACM1200 mic at the original cost please pm me. These are still with Chance, I'm in Australia... the red no's win.......

PM Sent.Well, the wait's worn me out... if anyone would like to buy a 73 pre and an ACM1200 mic at the original cost please pm me. These are still with Chance, I'm in Australia... the red no's win.......
just to get an ideaSteve, we're still what appears to be a long way from these being serviceable. So in a way, none of us really have the pres yet. I'd wait it out if I were you. You really haven't missed anything.
Steve, we're still what appears to be a long way from these being serviceable. So in a way, none of us really have the pres yet. I'd wait it out if I were you. You really haven't missed anything.
Is there any update on parts (transformers and circuit boards) for upgrades to the ACM 1200?
Last I heard, Chance was getting toward the end. He sent out a large number of invoices last week. He's been more active over at PSW.I'm wondering how the shipping is going as I'm still hoping to get ribbons, shock mounts, and resolution for items from the last two group buys. Chance had said he would take care of that once the shipping was complete.
Eureka!
At long last, a GREEN YES!
Invoice paid and what not. Now to await gear, bone up on transistor swaps, and other such merriment. Oh, and buy a rack. (Teeheehee, I said "rack")
Jon M
Well keep us abreast of your progress. (Teeheehee, I said "progress")
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I'm wondering how the shipping is going as I'm still hoping to get ribbons, shock mounts, and resolution for items from the last two group buys. Chance had said he would take care of that once the shipping was complete.
I also just noticed another huge difference. The power line filter caps on the individual boards on the 73 (no hum) are 1000uF, while the ones on the 83 (hum) are just 100 uF. Unfortunately, I don't have any parts that big handy to see if upping the size of the cap helps. All my parts are single digit uF and under except for a few that don't have bendable leads, and thus can't be wired in too easily.I'll get some parts tomorrow. (Radio Shack and Fry's close way too early on Sunday.)
I noticed one other thing that everyone with a 73 should note: on the 73 (no hum), the power filtering capacitors on three of the audio boards are SEVERELY under-specified in their voltage rating. They are 1000uF caps rated at a mere 25V. This is on a 24V power rail.... That means these parts are running right up against their MAXIMUM voltage rating. For safety, these parts should have been specified with at LEAST a 30V rating, and ideally 35V. Chance, please make SURE this gets fixed for future revisions. Using caps this close to their maximum voltage is absolutely unacceptable even in devices with cooling fans. In rack-mount devices with no cooling whatsoever, it is absolute suicide.
I can't say this strongly enough: for anyone who owns a 73, you should IMMEDIATELY replace ALL THREE of those 1,000uF capacitors with a capacitor of the same value and at LEAST a 35V rating. I doubt the 73s will run for more than about 2-3 months of continuous use before these parts explode, if that long. Rubycon caps are good caps, but their use doesn't excuse running them right at the limit....
The 81's power filtering capacitors are at least a reasonable voltage (35V), albeit probably too small a value.
There are also four capacitors on the lefthand board that are 25V. I don't think that they are likely to come close enough to 25V to worry about them, but if you're paranoid, you might consider replacing those as well. Despite the boards being seemingly identical, the parts are numbered differently as follows:
73 Number/81 Number: rating
- 1C5/1C5: 220uF
- 2C5/1C15: 220uF
- 2C2/1C12: 470uF
- 1C2/1C2: 470uF
First fire, then explosion -- kickass! Maybe a car chase next?I doubt the 73s will run for more than about 2-3 months of continuous use before these parts explode, if that long.