I never understood that. If you design in a fuse cause you need to protect a circuit, make it serviceable and accessible without having to open the box. Here’s one on @Inspector #20 ’s 8200 Marshall head.I don't know about the PT20 but I did give my sister in law a Runt 20 and it has 4 fuses on the main board inside the the chassis

I agree. My 1982 Marshall is Canadian version with heater fuses etc. While they rarely go, what a pain. Even has HT amd mains fuses inside as well as the one main outside.I never understood that. If you design in a fuse cause you need to protect a circuit, make it serviceable and accessible without having to open the box. Here’s one on @Inspector #20 ’s 8200 Marshall head.
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It's because people put in oversized fuses..and they grab onto energized fuses and get shocked.I never understood that. If you design in a fuse cause you need to protect a circuit, make it serviceable and accessible without having to open the box. Here’s one on @Inspector #20 ’s 8200 Marshall head.
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Is it the smaller DHX12? It has a removable panel on back to make or semi open back. Nice compact little cab!! Or could be one of the bigger ones.
I have a line on some NOS Soviet-era Reflektor military grade 6P14Ps at a good price.As far EL84 goes the longest lasting I have found are Sovtek EL84M Power Vacuum Tube
The day's of $2.20 each buying by the case are over and I tried the fake Golden Lion N709/El84 very disappointing they lack power.
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That's not the Traynor, it's a custom build I bought on Reverb years ago.Is it the smaller DHX12? It has a removable panel on back to make or semi open back. Nice compact little cab!! Or could be one of the bigger ones.
Oh yeah I knew that was not the Trayonr, I was asking which Traynor you were looking at as I have the one in question.That's not the Traynor, it's a custom build I bought on Reverb years ago.
Extra tall & wide (much larger taller than the Traynor) but not as deep as a Marshall cab.
One piece back panel on it; I like the punchiness of a sealed cab myself.
Its size makes it sound a little deeper than most sealed 1x12s.
IMO it's actually closer to the tone of a 4x12 than the Marshall 1936 2x12 is, which is what I use with my rack rig these days.
My tone standard really is the Marshall 1960A 4x12 that I gigged from 1980 through the 90s, and should never have sold.
It was loaded with the G12-65s, and to this day that's the sound I hear in my head when I think ideal Celestion tone.
The aggressive voice of a Vintage 30 works quite well with the Friedman though, and stands well in a mix.
Also sounds very nice with my old Boogie Mk II which is pretty fat.
I did buy the Traynor cab I looked at - it's a YCX12, blue Tolex and a slightly curved front when seen from the side.
Quite compact: front-mounted V30 and completely sealed in back - the only screws visible are securing the jackplate.
If I ever get the two cabs in the same room I'll take a pic of them side by side.
Dang, another bummer!Bit of an update: installed the new EL84s and they appeared to work okay; amp produced sound for a bit.
But when I checked it again later, nothing. And the power tubes appeared to be redplating.
I'm not up to checking transformer problems so I'll have to take it to someone.

Yeah, this is the older version of the Pink Taco. The newer PT's have a more hybrid type of board but still with mostly the same components.Supposed pic of a PT gut shot below.
