norburybrook wrote: ↑Fri May 17, 2019 10:22 am
if it's covered with silicone then there'l be no vibration of components ....subtle tone choices......
 
 
how do you fix stuff if it's gooped?
M
 
Well, it's funny you ask. My friend Paul in LA, a good friend of mine owned a Dumble. One of the early "bought it for a grand, flipped it for 3 grand and today it's at Carter's for 100-K" guys..lol. He owns 4 or 5 of my amps and honestly felt the Dumble was a good amp but feels mine are great/better/whatever. Whatever...
So, he had his Dumble develop a noise issue. He's a handy guy and opened it up but when he saw the goop, he decided to just take it to the man. He described the abode (I believe that weird church-like building on Jackson Brown's property). He said he walked down a hall to his shop room, both sides of which were filled with stacks and stacks of old Fender amp chassis. Some missing power transformers, some missing output transformers, some missing parts here or there...from which Dumble selected "exceptional examples of the parts he required for his designs".  My friend hands him the amp and he proceeds to take a Dremel with a cutter wheel on it, and basically chop the goop right off on the preamp end of the board !! Tossed it in the garbage, rewired the preamp, tested and regooped it... 
I don't disagree that he used parts that (at the time) were unheard of in guitar amps. Randy Smith at Mesa actually used some RN resistors in the early Boogie MK-1's. I don't know if he got them because they were quieter, tighter tolerance, sounded better, or he saw what Dumble did. As mentioned earlier, some of the early amps I made with audiophile caps and Holco resistors and RN series resistors were pretty tits...sadly, those parts not being RoHs or available kinda sucks...The PRC resistors (made in the states these days) are very good, although costly..
Thanks for the kind words. I'm not here often, I'm pretty involved with the business and whatever spare time I do have is spent with the family or playing gigs while I still can.
Proud holder of US Patent # 7336165.