Thanks for your patients with me. I am looking for escutcheons for my AW 23, 7 knobs. The cabinet is looking good, but missing them. I have the chassis fully restored and working well. I also need a speaker. If you have any source, I would appreciate it.
Thank heaven for Hammond, my Mcmurdo v had the tone stack hacked out, long before the set came into my possession, I ran the tone schematic through ltspice to get the inductor values, Mouser provided.
I now have accumulated parts to build the combined psu and amp, luckily I have enough bench supplies to prove the radio is working.
I quite often find that if you keep chipping away, rather than tearing into a project, it allows thinking time. This helps to find the best way around a problem.
And as you know I found a way around the seven pin socket problem for my Philly a while ago.
Mike: Nice power supply. I can source a similar used Heathkit supply here on Ebay.
I worked for them from 1967 thru 1974. I left in 1975. Here, Hammond transformer company makes suitable transformers for tube equipment at reasonable prices. I also have several Hammond organ Leslie amplifiers that have a balanced input. Since I would also need 6.3 volts at 5 amps for the filaments, a complete transformer supply would be better. When I bought my Allwave 23, the one question I didn't ask was does it work? The answer as I found out was no. The power transformer had a shorted winding. Thru this list I was able to find a company in Michigan that could wind a new one. Took several months, and since we go the Muskegon Mi. in October, and the company is on the way, I was able to pick up the new one. Minor construction differences required a custom mount, but it works just fine. For my needs, I would only need the tuner B+ and -20 volts for the bias circuits. I would also need to source the 7 pin socket to match the tuner plug. Since it is different from the standard 7 pin, that could be hard to find. I enjoy your posts on restorations.
EH Scott Radio Enthusiasts
The Fine Things are Always Hand Made
Mike hadley's Comments
Comment Wall (3 comments)
You need to be a member of EH Scott Radio Enthusiasts to add comments!
Join EH Scott Radio Enthusiasts
Hi Mike,
Thanks for your patients with me. I am looking for escutcheons for my AW 23, 7 knobs. The cabinet is looking good, but missing them. I have the chassis fully restored and working well. I also need a speaker. If you have any source, I would appreciate it.
David Dodgen
Thom;
Thank heaven for Hammond, my Mcmurdo v had the tone stack hacked out, long before the set came into my possession, I ran the tone schematic through ltspice to get the inductor values, Mouser provided.
I now have accumulated parts to build the combined psu and amp, luckily I have enough bench supplies to prove the radio is working.
I quite often find that if you keep chipping away, rather than tearing into a project, it allows thinking time. This helps to find the best way around a problem.
And as you know I found a way around the seven pin socket problem for my Philly a while ago.
Mike
I worked for them from 1967 thru 1974. I left in 1975. Here, Hammond transformer company makes suitable transformers for tube equipment at reasonable prices. I also have several Hammond organ Leslie amplifiers that have a balanced input. Since I would also need 6.3 volts at 5 amps for the filaments, a complete transformer supply would be better. When I bought my Allwave 23, the one question I didn't ask was does it work? The answer as I found out was no. The power transformer had a shorted winding. Thru this list I was able to find a company in Michigan that could wind a new one. Took several months, and since we go the Muskegon Mi. in October, and the company is on the way, I was able to pick up the new one. Minor construction differences required a custom mount, but it works just fine. For my needs, I would only need the tuner B+ and -20 volts for the bias circuits. I would also need to source the 7 pin socket to match the tuner plug. Since it is different from the standard 7 pin, that could be hard to find. I enjoy your posts on restorations.
Welcome to
EH Scott Radio Enthusiasts
Sign Up
or Sign In
© 2025 Created by Kent King. Powered by
Badges | Report an Issue | Terms of Service