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In Reply to: RE: Mike, who made that tranny? posted by Michael Samra on September 01, 2014 at 00:06:51
Triad = 830. I've seen plenty of Triad irons in old tweed era Fender amps. They usually have their name on label.
"926" is a mystery. Maybe, a secondary (sorry for the pun) company winding for Thordarson? Would be interesting to find the history.
Do your Fisher amps have "926" EIA stamped onto the trannies?
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Do your Fisher amps have "926" EIA stamped onto the trannies?
I never looked. Steve,sometimes companies that bought parts like transformers and chokes would stamp their own part numbers on the case.
Many of those end bells were standardized sizes and the company would do that made them would do that for proprietary reasons.The RCA 119834 flyback transformers were made by Thordarson for RCA but RCA stamped their own part number on them..Coming from an industrial automotive town as I do I see this a lot.
Honest amplification is better than excessive 2nd order distortion anytime.
all of the 1950s Fairchild amps (Raymond Lowey cosmetic designs). Also, Todd OEM "top shelf" trannies for many of the late 1950s and early 1960s Fisher units and all of the same vintage Madison-Fielding amps.
Besides the Fairchild 255, 265, 275 amps,
Fisher brass faced amps and receivers, including the 101, X-101, X-101-ST, early 202 amps, Fisher 500B and most 500C receivers, they also made trannies for the rare
Madison Fielding 320 and 360 int amps. Todd made some of the best !
IT, much thanks! Add EIA number, manufacturer, and info to my list.
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