So I finally got my hands on that old tube amp I’ve been wanting to restore, but when I opened it up, the sheer number of capacitors and resistors needing replacement just feels overwhelming. I’m staring at this mess of vintage wiring and wondering if I should just focus on a full recap first, or if I should be checking all the tube sockets and transformers for issues at the same time. I guess I’m just curious how others have approached their first major restoration when everything inside looks like it needs attention.
Safety first when you open a tube amp. I would not power it up until you have a plan. Start with a simple baseline and do not power it up yet. Look at the power supply capacitors and the rectifier caps for bulges or leaks and note any that look bad. If you have a meter check the rails but only when the chassis is safe. A full recap is a big job and not always necessary right away. I would start with the filter caps and then move to tube sockets and transformers as you go. Label wires and photograph connections before you touch anything.
I felt the same once. When the inside looks like a tangle I start with the quiet steps. First I do a careful recap of the power supply and then I test the line and tone paths. If the amp still hums you can decide what to do next. I have found it better not to rush the whole job.
The urge to replace every part is loud but maybe not clever. Some caps hold up better than you expect and the heat cycles can reveal more about the design than the age. Focus on safety first and only swap parts that are clearly failed or will affect the circuit most. Even a careful recap of the essential rails is enough for a start.
What if you frame the project around restoring the sound stage rather than every component. Start with the input and output stages, clean or replace the potentiometers, check the tube sockets for crackling, and then decide how much to recap. The goal is a stable baseline you can enjoy not a pristine showroom piece.
If you want the vibe back fast you can do a quick test on one channel at a time and swap a few obvious caps. The rest can wait. I would keep the wiring intact unless you see fray and then plan a careful recap later.
People who read your notes will want a story too. Document decisions but keep the scene loose. Frame the work as a journey through a box of old parts and a handful of tools rather than a checklist. The idea of recap can be a thread you carry, but the point is to learn the language of the circuit without losing patience.