04-13-2013, 11:50 PM
I don't know if the #45s would be damaged or not from hooking them up that way, at least not for the short period of time that they were hooked up wrong. I think if you test the #45s, and they come up good, that will be the end of it, there just isn't a lot to them since they have a directly heated cathode.
Don't feel bad about it, with a Canadian Westinghouse 801 I was working on last summer I got a similar level of performance to that Majestic model 20. At first I though maybe the audio interstage was stuffed, it wasn't, nor was the output transformer, the voltages were all there. Then my uncle figured it could be an alignment problem since I had to replace one of the IF cans, it did not make a difference. Then we had a look at the tube layout diagram, when I replaced the tubes I got the lead for the IF amp tube and the second detector mixed up. You see in the Westinghouse 801 just because the grid lead is near a tube did not mean that it connected to that tube. So we swapped them around and the set nearly blew my eardrums out.
I think that every one of us has caused a self inflicted snag at one time or another, wrong lead connected to wrong tube pin, wrong tube in wrong socket, etc. I still do this from time to time which is why if I really go at a radio I check my work two or three times comparing it to the diagram, it's easy to do on something like an octal socket.
Regards
Arran
Arran
Don't feel bad about it, with a Canadian Westinghouse 801 I was working on last summer I got a similar level of performance to that Majestic model 20. At first I though maybe the audio interstage was stuffed, it wasn't, nor was the output transformer, the voltages were all there. Then my uncle figured it could be an alignment problem since I had to replace one of the IF cans, it did not make a difference. Then we had a look at the tube layout diagram, when I replaced the tubes I got the lead for the IF amp tube and the second detector mixed up. You see in the Westinghouse 801 just because the grid lead is near a tube did not mean that it connected to that tube. So we swapped them around and the set nearly blew my eardrums out.
I think that every one of us has caused a self inflicted snag at one time or another, wrong lead connected to wrong tube pin, wrong tube in wrong socket, etc. I still do this from time to time which is why if I really go at a radio I check my work two or three times comparing it to the diagram, it's easy to do on something like an octal socket.
Regards
Arran
Arran