Hey everybody,
Recently bought what I was told is a working WG 4600 chassis (to try to use with one of the old consumer tubes I have 'collected') and because I am a monitor noob I have no idea what I am looking at even after reading through the manual I found.
Before I try to power this thing up and blow it up right out of the gate I was hoping for some wisdom on its connections.
To begin with, there is a stray wire (a ground from location 'E' area on the neckboard?) that has a blob of solder on the end but is just hanging loose.
Any hints on where this is supposed to be terminated?
The other neckboard ground goes to the metal part of the chassis frame (based on a note written next to a screw there) but does the jacketed ground from the flyback unit attach to that same location on the frame, or go somewhere else?
And there are a number of harnesses that I have no clue on what they are (or where they attach.)
The one from the neckboard (labeled 'K') I would think goes back to a location on the mainboard (or is it one of the daughter boards?) but where?
Then there is one harness from the main board (labeled 'H') that I don't know what it is or where it goes.
And then yet another group of wires (red, green, blue, and yellow- NOT in a harness- just with spade connectors) that I am not sure of what they are either.
I have looked through the WG manual and searched here and elsewhere for this and it isn't helping me any, mostly because I literally don't know what I am looking at.
Only thing I DO know is that it needs an isolation transformer- and I assume that it is a 1:1 type for this chassis?
And while I'm at it I suppose, does someone have a ballpark value for the yoke to see which of these 19" tubes I have may actually work without stressing anything out?
Now I think of it too, is there a specific 'recommissioning' protocol to follow so I don't immediately roast chassis or tube? (or me either while I'm at it...)
I planned on using this in a jamma wired mame PC build if possible and don't want to make a mess.
Any clarity would be greatly appreciated!
Aloha,
Bobby