I actually got to play with it too

An acquaintance of one of my best customers mailed me his 7F33 amp from a Zenith SFD2560.
I was going over the re-cap work done by another guy he bought it from and found just one (1) mistake in all the capacitor replacements, a .022 where a .22 needed to be. I did catch about 17 OOT resistors, all half watt with silver or gold bands, 10-20% too high. Many restorers assume Zenith and Motorola used better quality parts, but all carbon resistors increase in value just sitting around. I have tossed over half of the spare, unused NOS resistors I measure, so I order new ones at 1% metal film. These are not expensive but time-consuming to replace, in order to thread the small gauge wires onto tube pins and terminal strips.
Because this amplifier is not a typical stereo P-P 6BQ5/EL84 amp, it has different feedback for each channel, completely different tone, balance, volume and an expansion (extended) stereo control that ranges from mono to stereo to extended. Hence, the off-tolerance resistors can really exacerbate balance and tone issues between L + R channels.
The only problem was testing the amp, because the tuner-preamp was not sent along. Yet, a power-up showed voltages a bit high, as the amp shares its power supply with the preamp/tuner. I decided to check schematics between my 1960 preamp-tuner 9D24 and 1961 preamp-tuner 9F24, seeing a few differences mostly due to the 1961 SFF2560 model also having reverb!
With these options, I tried to plug in the amp anyway and first my tuner preamp in my SFD2565 has a bad power switch, very scratchy volume control and neither AM nor FM was very good at all. I used a CD player connected to tape input. It did present the effect of expansion (extended) stereo control very well. I can tell you this is not reverb but it is a Zenith exclusive design that no other manufacturer offered to my knowledge. It was on only 1960-62 models and reverb was only offered on the 1961-62 models. At any rate, it is a very different reverb circuit using 3-4 tubes on a separate chassis.
In operation on my tuner/preamp, the balance control only silenced one channel. The presence control (Magnavox "timbre") did nothing. Bass and treble seemed to work well. But extended stereo control made up for it by creating an effect I can only describe as ambience and sound staging that could be overdone with a control just like reverberation. I was using a stereo source so I'm not sure how a mono channel could benefit from this effect.
I mailed the amp back and the customer says he is happy with it, so I now want to restore this 1960 and 1962 model MH2635 I have with reverb AND FM stereo but a single-ended 6BQ5 amp

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