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Audio and Video Talk
The Vintage Audio Section
Vintage kit: to restore or preserve as is ?
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<blockquote data-quote="darrylo" data-source="post: 216200" data-attributes="member: 666"><p>I am thinking along the lines of doing a cosmetic restoration, If and only if I can match the paint and graphics 99%. I honestly don?t thin it will take away value from a amp with paint chips scratches and rusty corners.</p><p></p><p>I however agree that changing the components can change the character of the amp.</p><p></p><p>The only issue is the original TCC caps are not readily available. Can I use the russian PIO caps ? and can I use modern carbon or metal film resistors without changing the sound ?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="darrylo, post: 216200, member: 666"] I am thinking along the lines of doing a cosmetic restoration, If and only if I can match the paint and graphics 99%. I honestly don?t thin it will take away value from a amp with paint chips scratches and rusty corners. I however agree that changing the components can change the character of the amp. The only issue is the original TCC caps are not readily available. Can I use the russian PIO caps ? and can I use modern carbon or metal film resistors without changing the sound ? [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
The Vintage Audio Section
Vintage kit: to restore or preserve as is ?
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