Above pictured is the bent transformer cover----that won't do!! I had to remove the cover to straighten it. I always thought those covers were stampings, but they are die-cast. These amps are Clair Bros and have huge Zoebel resistors, can/should they be retained in the 'WOPLing' process?
Peter,
We have already had this discussion on the phone.
The 50 watt 5 ohm Dale RH-50 resistors (in the Zobel network) were used by Clair Brothers because they drove the amps hard into clipping above 8kHz into a 4 ohm load. These Dale resistors have a maximum voltage range of 1285 volts. The TRW BWH's that Phase used (2 ohm ohm 2 watt in parallel) rating was: "dielectric withstand voltage (RMS)": 1000V. Phase also used some TRW PW5 5 ohm 5W resistors. I'm not sure of the voltage rating on these. The Vishay CPF-2's used on the W.O.A. back-planes have a maximum working voltage of 350V. If you use Don Imlay's 700 relay board he is currently using (2) Xichon 2.7 ohm resistors in series (for an effective 5.4 ohms) which have a W.V. rating of 350V / O.V. rating of 600 volts. (NOTE: Don replaced the earlier Ohmite TWW5J4R7E's he was using because of some issues (oscillating - due to some inductance?) he had with them. They had a "dielectric withstand voltage" of 1000V.)
I would hesitate testing any of these amps both channels driven into a 4 ohm load at 20kHz for a given duration of time without the 50 watt resistors installed. Otherwise, you more than likely will blow up the resistors. I have experienced this first hand.
In Ben Duncan's book "High Performance Audio Power Amplifiers" pg 382:
"In amplifier servicing, discovering slightly singed zobel resistors is not unusual. They are best looked at, whenever amplifiers are overhauled; and also after anyone discovers that a faulty console (or preamp or other equipment) has been driving RFup the system. Thoughtful makers will place the Zobel resistors where they can be readily inspected and replaced. Ironically, once the Zobel network is at all damaged, the stabilizing resistance value usually increases, thus the amplifier is all the more likely to go unstable, generate its own RF output, and finish off the burnout."
NOTE: This appears to suggest that the Zobel should be located on the speaker binding posts.
However, Bob Cordell's book "Designing Power Amplifiers" 1st edition pg 226 states:
"......suggests that the Zobel network should be located close to the output transistors."
By the way, there were some later Phase Linear 700 series 1 amps that had the Zobel network located on a pc board screwed to the bottom of the Honeywell meters along with some incandescent bulbs to illuminate the meters.
Installing the Dale 50 watt 5 ohm resistors becomes a bit of a problem when installing Don's board. You would need to mount them somewhere else on the side of the chassis and run some leads to the board.
Without the 50 watt resistors installed, I would hesitate to say that the amp is a Phase Linear Clair Brothers amp. Since that part was required by them. But then again the amp will no longer be a Clair amp with the W.O.A. mods anyway.
The choice is yours to make.
Ed