Hi,
About two months ago I was at a garage sale and came across a beat up old RCA 400 projector. It was missing the reels and the arms and the belts to drive them. However, I could see that the tube amp was still in there with tubes!  I bought it for ten bucks.  There was no schematic available for this particular model but I found one that was close.  I took it apart and it was a mess. Spider webs, rat dung, leaves and grime.  I took it apart and cleaned it up.  It actually turned on with my variac.
So, first thing I cleaned it out and just studied it.  Its tube complement was definitely vintage with a 6J7 preamp, some 6v6s and a 6SL7.  There was an extra 6V6 that was used to pull audio off of the 16mm tape (exciter circuit!).
I replaced the caps and resistors that were out of whack. I adjusted the input on the 6J7 for a guitar input and it worked.  A little odd sounding but clean and loud.  I had pulled the extra 6V6 because it was not needed but then after some poking around realized I could rewire the socket and fit in a 6SL7 (precursor to the 12AX7) and insert a simple reverb circuit with a reverb tank.  I put in a three-wire grounded wire and a fuse too.
I generally followed the Carolina Blues Special schematic (attached) for the reverb (replacing the 12AX7 with the 6SL7). I figured out where to pull the signal and return it. 
Then, I mounted it is a box I made from material on hand.  Wood from a defunct speaker cabinet, a red lamp lens from my Hammond project and a steel plate from the bottom of what was the amp chassis from a Baldwin organ.  Since the amp was mounted vertically in the projector I had to figure out how to mount it in the box. The chassis metal was not a uniform rectangle.  I learned how to rivet legs to the chassis to level it out. It is rough looking so I call it BillyTone.  The reverb tank is mounted upside down from the top of the box.  
The bottom two knobs are the original gain and tone though I converted the tone pot to a volume pot.  The upper two knobs are a dwell circuit and a reverb return.  Take a listen at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jt_7wuWhk_4
Next I need to work on wire routing a bit because it was very cramped in there and I think with some more canoodling I can better the noise floor.
I learned a lot from this forum when I worked on my Hammond AO-63 conversion and it translated well to this.
Thanks, James
			
			
						BillyTone - Conversion of RCA400 projector to guitar amp.
Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal
BillyTone - Conversion of RCA400 projector to guitar amp.
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						Re: BillyTone - Conversion of RCA400 projector to guitar amp.
Time to celebrate with a Billy beer!  
			
			
									
									
						
Re: BillyTone - Conversion of RCA400 projector to guitar amp.
Honestly, that is about the best and most perfect response I have seen! I think I will do that! 
			
			
									
									
						
Re: BillyTone - Conversion of RCA400 projector to guitar amp.
I thought I might add if it was not obvious - the photos are the before the modification.
			
			
									
									
						Re: BillyTone - Conversion of RCA400 projector to guitar amp.
That's a feel good find!
			
			
									
									
						- Tony Bones
- Posts: 228
- Joined: Thu Oct 30, 2014 8:24 pm
Re: BillyTone - Conversion of RCA400 projector to guitar amp.
Very good find! How do you like the tone controls?
As a side note, I'm a little impressed with the original RCA circuit. In particular the ground bus. Some of those old P2P amps were kind of haphazard.
			
			
									
									
						As a side note, I'm a little impressed with the original RCA circuit. In particular the ground bus. Some of those old P2P amps were kind of haphazard.

