But to do that even, I would have to change the power transformer or add a small filament transformer somewhere to augment as the 40-18100 PT only delivers 1.1 amp (and it runs pretty hot even with the one 12AX7 and two 6AQ5's I used). I too have left plenty of room on the board for further modification but, in my case, because I started with a little Acoustic G-20 as the donor amp, my chassis would be the more limiting part for me to expand should I later decide to redo with added tubes (as well as the space around the speaker when mounted in the cabinet). Cette jolie Musicmaster possède clairement tous les attributs de sa grande soeur des 60’s et a même un manche en érable flammé digne des plus beaux modèles du genre. The body was sanded down and refinished in red. Most of the parts have been changed, and the tailpiece was converted so the strings run through the body. The neck plays great and has an exceptional fretboard. It has a very nice straight neck with great frets. I built one last year, but mine was only slight modded from the original, So I used the solid state rectifier and the replacement transformer set for the Musicmaster from Classictone (PT = 40-18100, OT = 40-18101, Driver = 40-18093). 1966 Fender Musicmaster II with a refinished body. It was only offered with one single coil pickup at the neck from the factory. What power transformer is being used? I see that you have modded yours using a different one as you have switched to one that supports a 5V rectifier tube. The Fender Musicmaster II was a short-lived transitional model during the CBS takeover that featured the same design as the original Musicmaster (a 3/4 scale student model introduced in 1956) but with a regular 25.5' scale length.
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