I could not tell from the diagram if you have the Skipper 300 or, the Palomar 300a.
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Ide love to get another350Z I had a restored 350Z in the late 1990s I should never have sold it . I had a 300 A in the mid 1990s that thing was crazy it had a seperate transformer that plugged into the wall with another cord running to the box or head unit.
Just curious the comment on the transformer up off the floor. I get this thread is old and likely will go unanswered, but I was wondering why that is a bad idea?The 350Z and the 300A are the same amp, for all intents and purposes...
The 300A was the same physical size, and as you pointed out, had the transformer in an external chassis.
Guess which one has a problem cooking plate transformers? BOTH!
The 300A doesn't come with air cooling holes factory (a few late runs did, right before the change to the 350Z), and the 350Z cooked the thing in between 6 tubes.
The best thing you can do for the 350Z is pull the driver tubes, and drive it with a 100 watt PEP driver.
The 300A, just mount a fan above the transformer box, and put some holes in the bottom. NEVER lay the power supply on the floor, and you'll have a happy amp for years to come.
--Toll_Free
No air flow to the transformer. Might be a problem if it were on carpet. A top mounted fan on the transformer pulling air from the bottom and out of the top should keep it happy.
I have one of these (300A) but have not noticed the transformer getting hot but I only use SSB and not all that often. I just may check it out the next time it is powered up.
73
David