revision F on the board and pre-500 serial

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Nico

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Hi, I've purchased a Dual Rectifier many years ago and I always thought it was a rev C or D as its serial number was R026X.
It has all pre-rev. G outer criteria (power transformer and output transformer S/N, loop, covering, power chord etc.).

However I never checked the board revision, until today, when I removed the chassis and discovered it has R1-F1 printed on the mother board.

I guess either the original serial number sticker or the original mother board has been replaced...
Is there possibly another explanation?

Thanks.
Best regards
Nico
 
Take some photos of the PCB, upload them and link them here. It's pretty easy to tell from the circuit details whether it's Rev C/D or later revision.
 
Yep, that's RevF circuit.

First I thought that the serial number sticker could've been altered for fraudulent marketing purposes. But now with the dating on the choke it became somewhat confusing for me as I know some rev C units with later production date. You could ask Mesa if they had any data on that particular serial number - or other possible Rectos checked on that particular day.
 
It could be a case where a malfunctioning or broken circuit board had to be replaced and they were shipping Rev F's when they did that.
That has happened with some early Rec's, I remember reading about a 'pre 500' that was the real deal except that it had a Rev G board inside. Reportedly, Mesa had switched the board during amp maintenance.

But as long as the rest of the package (transformers etc.) is Rev C/D, you should be able to revert a Rev F to the Rev C specs pretty easily (well, except for the circuit board marking, that is).
 
Best guess is Mesa had it in for repair back in '93 or '94, so it ended up getting an F board dropped in. Send "Authorized Boogie" a PM and see if he can find any repair records for it around '93 or so.
 
Here is the final explanation from product specialist Trent Blake:

In May of 1993 your amp was sent to us by our UK Distributor at the time (Rock Road Co.) for a clean mod update. This required the use of a new circuit board and associated parts.

Best regards
Nico
 
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