mainly wood

Our monthly heating bill was over $120 last month. Thank you for the wool socks grandma, perfect timing.

I am now officially anti dust jacket. As of 2012 all of my books have been liberated.

The new moriarty album was hard to resist downloading, but definitely worth the wait.

Mel’s hanging up her DIY blinds.

Fixing up my Beaver 6200 Table saw. Thanks to Mel for helping me move this. Two weeks of disassembly and rust removal just makes it that much more satisfying to use. Big thanks to Scotty for his saw knowledge.

With the new saw, we finally dimensioned rough lumber! Big thanks to Shabby, sorry about all the dust.

My finished push shoe, made with scrap black walnut. More things must be covered in tung oil – asap.

Deluxe Reverb rebuild

I’m very happy to say that my Deluxe Reverb rebuild is finally complete. I’ve wanted to build my own Deluxe Reverb for a few years now and I was going to purchase a kit, but ended up finding a silver face Deluxe Reverb on Detroit craigslist for cheaper than a kit would cost. The guy had described it as being in good shape, and an amp technician friend of his had recently replaced all the capacitors and converted it to black face. [the black/silver thing is basically this: This amp originally had a black faceplate, but then Fender was sold to CBS and they made various cost-cutting changes internally and changed the colour of the faceplate to silver.]

“amp technician friend” will definitely be a big red flag next time. The amp had the wrong tubes in it, drawing way too much current. The reverb and tremolo weren’t working, and the amp sounded like ass and made all sorts of crackling noises. But since I was planning to rip all of the wiring out and start from scratch, those things thankfully weren’t an issue.


Above is some of the original wiring. Lots of it had been melted with a soldering iron, and some components weren’t the correct value. Also, everything inside the chassis was coated with a horrible wax that CBS coated on the black circuit board, which ended up heating up during use and redepositing itself everywhere.

The broken reverb ended up being a physically broken reverb tank, and thankfully I had another tank in my junk-bin for donor parts.

Another fun surprise was finding dozens of randomly placed holes through the baffle, presumably drilled for some unknown reason. I filled these and repainted the baffle before I made some tolex repairs.

After removing all of the old wiring and getting down to the bare chassis, I could clean the last of the wax off and start building from scratch with new wiring and components.

After seeing how the wax got everywhere, I took all of the potentiometers apart and cleaned them. I also removed the wax from all of the circuit boards by melting the wax in the oven and then absorbing it off. I used “vintage style” cloth covered wiring, which actually has modern insulation under the fabric which ended up being quite thick and hard to dress nicely.



The cabinet and the rest of the amp cleaned up very nicely after removing the nicotine. But unfortunately the paint wiped clean-off the metal Fender logo as I was cleaning it, so I had to repaint it. This was my first vacuum tube project, and I really enjoyed it – everything is large and easy to see, and the circuit is uncomplicated, making it relatively easy to understand and troubleshoot. Very happy with this project, and glad it’s over. Despite CBS’s annoying changes, the construction of the amp was still very faithful to Leo Fender’s original design – an elegant and simple mass produced amplifier that was built to last, and sounded killer. The amp sounds great as a bedroom amp and even better at max volume, where it still isn’t TOO loud (especially compared to my previous amp) but can work in a band. Anyways, here’s to another 40 years.

Fixing some hi-fi stuff

It seems as though my latest “thing” is hi-fi equipment (again). Here’s some pictures from some stuff I’ve been fixing up recently.

Sound Dynamics Speakers

Last week I replaced the woofers in a pair of old Sound Dynamics speakers, which were made in Canada. Not exactly expensive speakers, but were still worth bringing back to life. One woofer was replaced by a car-audio type driver, and the other woofer had the foam surround deteriorated, so I replaced both. The end result is pretty nice, and I think these may be used for speakers in the workshop.

Acoustic Research AR-XB turntable

I really wanted to get into vinyl records in the last few years, but didn’t want to start a collection in New Zealand because it would be too hard to bring back to Canada. So one of the first things I did when I got back to Canada was find an old turntable! This is an Acoustic Research AR-XB that came from a very very smokey house. It took about 2 hours to strip the turntable down to clean the tobacco smoke off of it.

Thanks to John for giving me a new cartridge for this.. it sounds great. If you’re in the Windsor area and you have any old albums, I may be interested.. shoot me an email.

Mission 707 Speakers

My friend John brought over a pair of Mission 707 speakers that had the foam surround completely gone on them. We glued on a new rubber surround, and they were good as new. It was interesting to see “Toronto Canada” printed on the back of the woofer, because I never knew that Mission manufactured speakers and drivers in Canada. Of course, this was back when we used to actually manufacture things in North America… beautiful speakers too.