Thats what I call a comprehensive refurbishment!Nice job Martyn ,what a great tone,best place for those sceen resistors ,look much neater there,great playing again.
I have this very same amp and with the knobs that yours has on there it looks just like mine. My amp had one original knob when I got it so I changed all of them out, but man what a great job you did on this one - very thorough and the playing was very nice as always.
Not long ago you could pick these up for sub £200. They are way above that now. A very articulate amp. Very nice tone from it. I missed out on a reverb model about 15 years ago and am still peed off I didn't have it!!
Hello. They are indeed going up in value. Great sounding amps. You can still find them for 300 ish, though they might need a bit of work. The reverbs are often broken and the tanks are not repairable. Thanks for watching. Take care.
I noticed that also. The body of the can provides the ground where it contacts the chassis. I would probably have used the ground terminal on the cap and found a good clean ground point on the chassis to connect them to, as the chassis looked like it had some corrosion in the area of the can caps. Perhaps Martyn cleaned the chassis in that area before installing the 2 new can caps.
Hello Michael. That was some staining on the chassis. The bolt had been used before. When I took the bolt out from the previous mounting it looked like brand new around the bolt hole. However, there is some info coming soon on this amp on the way I wired the caps. The amp is back at the shop and I haven't been able to get down to fetch it with Mum being ill. When I get it back I will do another video on this one. Take care Michael.
Great Job on that amp, sounds great. Do you by any chance know if there's a big difference in sound between these sv/rsv amps and the regular mk iii version of that amp? I have the chance to buy an rsv combo version or a mk iii head. The sound of the mk iii as a bass amp got me researching these amps but now I'm wondering if the rsv version might sound just about the same.
Hello. schematicheaven.net/bargainbin.html Scroll down the page till you see Selmer. All the schematics are there. Let me know if you are struggling and I will take a look at them for you. Thanks for watching and take care.
Thats what I call a comprehensive refurbishment!Nice job Martyn ,what a great tone,best place for those sceen resistors ,look much neater there,great playing again.
Hello, thank you. Take care mate.
Great refurb Martyn.. That amp now sounds tremendous, helped along by your expert touch on the guitar of course.
Hello Pete, thank you.
Well done Master!
Thanks Miguel. Take care.
I have this very same amp and with the knobs that yours has on there it looks just like mine. My amp had one original knob when I got it so I changed all of them out, but man what a great job you did on this one - very thorough and the playing was very nice as always.
Hello Ron, thank you. The knobs don't seem to hold up well. You can't beat the old Chicken knobs. Take care mate.
@@vintageguitaramp_guitarteacher Thanks buddy
Not long ago you could pick these up for sub £200. They are way above that now. A very articulate amp. Very nice tone from it. I missed out on a reverb model about 15 years ago and am still peed off I didn't have it!!
Hello. They are indeed going up in value. Great sounding amps. You can still find them for 300 ish, though they might need a bit of work. The reverbs are often broken and the tanks are not repairable. Thanks for watching. Take care.
Do love the Selmer
Hello. A great sounding amp. Take care.
Do those new double 100uF caps not need grounding? Obviously not great tone and great playing for the demo. Good one!
I noticed that also. The body of the can provides the ground where it contacts the chassis. I would probably have used the ground terminal on the cap and found a good clean ground point on the chassis to connect them to, as the chassis looked like it had some corrosion in the area of the can caps. Perhaps Martyn cleaned the chassis in that area before installing the 2 new can caps.
Hello Michael. That was some staining on the chassis. The bolt had been used before. When I took the bolt out from the previous mounting it looked like brand new around the bolt hole. However, there is some info coming soon on this amp on the way I wired the caps. The amp is back at the shop and I haven't been able to get down to fetch it with Mum being ill. When I get it back I will do another video on this one. Take care Michael.
Great Job on that amp, sounds great.
Do you by any chance know if there's a big difference in sound between these sv/rsv amps and the regular mk iii version of that amp?
I have the chance to buy an rsv combo version or a mk iii head.
The sound of the mk iii as a bass amp got me researching these amps but now I'm wondering if the rsv version might sound just about the same.
Hello. schematicheaven.net/bargainbin.html Scroll down the page till you see Selmer. All the schematics are there. Let me know if you are struggling and I will take a look at them for you. Thanks for watching and take care.
My eyes may be playing tricks on me, but, did you ground the two can caps under the rectifier? Regardless, she sounds pretty sweet!
More info on this one coming soon