The Twin Reverb is a favorite for musician’s who just want their amp to be loud and clean. Unfortunately modern reissues lack the reliability and repairability players require for a serious road-worthy amp. If endless repair bills and frustration have you on the verge of ditching your reissue amp, consider the possibility of a rewire.
Rewiring an amp is amongst the least expensive ways to achieve a custom handwired amp. While the main weakness of modern resissues lies with the cheap PC circuit design inside, the major costs of the amp as a whole are tied up in the cabinet, chassis, transformers and speakers. By salvaging these items and rewiring the internal circuitry new life can be breathed into a tempermental reissue at a fraction of the cost of a whole new amp.
The Twin shown above offers a typical example of what you can expect to find inside a modern reissue amp. This particular amp has all the qualties that make a good candidate for rewiring. The most essential characteristics are its all tube design (no solid state reverb circuits or boost nonsense) and chassis mounted tube sockets.
It’s pretty quick work pulling the old board out. The bulk of the time is in cleaning the old leads off the tube sockets and cleaning the old solder of their pins to prepare them for reuse. It’s nice to try to salvage as many components as possible such as the original pilot light housing and switches but anything of questionable integrity has to go.
With all the major components removed from the chassis we can get a clean new start. Dismounting the transformers helps maneuver the chassis on the drill press in order to machine all the new mounting holes we’ll need for the power supply capacitors, circuit boards, etc…
Every rewire starts at the drawing board with a custom circuit design, schematic and layout. We can follow as true to an amp’s original design as is desired but it’s usually nice to take advantage of the opportunity to customize and voice the amp to better suit the musician. Once an initial schematic is finalized we produce our turret boards which you can see getting dry fitted above. If everything checks out it’s time to get the wiring underway:
In working with amps one at a time it’s nice to be able to invest a little more time in lead dress than would be possible in an assembly line process. Neatly routed leads aren’t just intended to be sexy to look at… the goal is to control interference between signals and minimize hum and noise. There’s nothing quite like hand wiring a Twin to make you understand why all the major manufactures have gone to PC board construction… the process is super labor intensive requiring many hours of patient steady soldering to bring it all together.
Finally we have a fully wired amp ready to power up and bring to life. An extensive process of ear testing and modifying is what makes the difference between an assembly line amp and a custom tuned “boutique” amplifier. Our end result is a truly unique sounding Twin Reverb with a couple twists: