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Dynaco SCA-35 fixer-upper

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hi all,
being a solid state guy, i'm not up on my tube amp history... is a Dynaco SCA-35 any good as a fixer-upper platform for a modest tube amplifier? not looking for the ultimate in hifi performance obviously, just some tube thrills on the cheap. my friend has one he's giving away and i'm wondering it's worth the time to recondition/modify. he already spent a couple hundred on new tubes last year, so those may be worth salvaging.

thanks,
dorkus
 
Yes. Reasonably nice iron (outputs are 8K with UL taps, very hefty for the power rating), but you'll end up doing pretty much a wholesale replacement of the circuitry. The circuit is crude and the circuit boards are awful quality. Same with switches and plugs.

There's plenty of room to work in, though, and you can turn it into a very nice-looking unit.
 
hi SY,

long time no see. :) (i've been completely out of the DIY loop for a while now, got too busy with other things - so much for Son of Dork! :p). thanks for the info... i'll Google around and see if i can find any good suggestions on improving the unit. i'll take a look at the original schematic as well.

cheers,
dorkus
 
frugal-phile™
Joined 2001
Paid Member
The SCA35 is a great donor, but as SY says the circuit and quality of boards & chassis is suspect.

I have an SCA35 project... iron is going on another chassis and i'll build up a circuit with a long-tailed pair on the front... mine will also borrow a PS Trafo from another unit to give me dual mono (the trafo on the SCA35 is reputed to be just a tad undersize)

dave
 
A ccs-loaded long tail is a good approach. If I were doing one, I'd consider a 12AT7- it's small, lowish distortion, cheap, and has enough gain that you can throw some feedback around the whole shmeer. In VA3, Morgan Jones shows a very nice little circuit (Bevois Valley), also a 1 tube input stage, that would fit just fine in the SCA-35 chassis.

Add a potentiometer and a switch and you've got a nice line-level integrated amp.
 

PRR

Member
Joined 2003
Paid Member
> some tube thrills on the cheap.

If the circuit boards are not toasted: just fix what's broke and enjoy it. The Dynas may not be the gold standard of high-end audio, but as a break from stolid-state sound they are just what you want.
 
Definitely.
Simply bypass the tone control circuit and short out the ceramic cap at the amp input (not needed unless your signal source has DC offset) will make the SCA-35 sound a whole lot better without spending a dime.
Replacing those light greenish blue color caps with polyproplene caps will further improve the sound.

dorkus said:
hi all,
being a solid state guy, i'm not up on my tube amp history... is a Dynaco SCA-35 any good as a fixer-upper platform for a modest tube amplifier? not looking for the ultimate in hifi performance obviously, just some tube thrills on the cheap. my friend has one he's giving away and i'm wondering it's worth the time to recondition/modify. he already spent a couple hundred on new tubes last year, so those may be worth salvaging.

thanks,
dorkus
 
Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.