Hi all,
Like many of you, I'm at home, not doing any gigs right now (not by my choice) so I'm in my shop working on some of those back-burnered projects. I'm building an amp for myself in a small cab (2x 6V6, dual rectifier, EF86 front end). I did an amp just like this for one of my buddies a couple of years ago and it's his favorite amp. I admit, that amp does sound good.
But I'd like to have a built-in reverb with this amp. The amp is quite small and I'll most probably be bringing it to rehearsals and very small gigs. Having the convenience of a built-in, one knob reverb is appealing to me. Yes, there are better sounding reverbs via outboard, pedals, etc (some of which I already own) but that's what I'm trying for right now.
I'd like to use an Accutronics (or other make) short reverb tank (the long one (17") won't fit in this small amp) and I want a circuit that is easy to integrate into an all-tube amp. I've looked at a couple circuits using the TL 072 IC (or another IC with the same pinout), one for drive and one for recovery and I'd like to pick a proven, good sounding circuit, if possible. Some people say discreet transistors are best for this sort of thing but others have written that ICs are ideal for this type of application, so it seems that there is no consensus.
Can anyone recommend a solid state reverb driver/recovery circuit for such an application? And, yes, I want to build it myself.
Also, I'm wondering if it's possible to power the ICs from the bias tap of my power transformer (stepped down and filtered, of course) or should I used a dedicated small transformer for this? Should I use a voltage regulator? I guess I hoping to converse with someone who has been down this path before and has some knowledge and experience about all this.
Thanks for all your comments and advice, as usual,
Bob M.
Like many of you, I'm at home, not doing any gigs right now (not by my choice) so I'm in my shop working on some of those back-burnered projects. I'm building an amp for myself in a small cab (2x 6V6, dual rectifier, EF86 front end). I did an amp just like this for one of my buddies a couple of years ago and it's his favorite amp. I admit, that amp does sound good.
But I'd like to have a built-in reverb with this amp. The amp is quite small and I'll most probably be bringing it to rehearsals and very small gigs. Having the convenience of a built-in, one knob reverb is appealing to me. Yes, there are better sounding reverbs via outboard, pedals, etc (some of which I already own) but that's what I'm trying for right now.
I'd like to use an Accutronics (or other make) short reverb tank (the long one (17") won't fit in this small amp) and I want a circuit that is easy to integrate into an all-tube amp. I've looked at a couple circuits using the TL 072 IC (or another IC with the same pinout), one for drive and one for recovery and I'd like to pick a proven, good sounding circuit, if possible. Some people say discreet transistors are best for this sort of thing but others have written that ICs are ideal for this type of application, so it seems that there is no consensus.
Can anyone recommend a solid state reverb driver/recovery circuit for such an application? And, yes, I want to build it myself.
Also, I'm wondering if it's possible to power the ICs from the bias tap of my power transformer (stepped down and filtered, of course) or should I used a dedicated small transformer for this? Should I use a voltage regulator? I guess I hoping to converse with someone who has been down this path before and has some knowledge and experience about all this.
Thanks for all your comments and advice, as usual,
Bob M.
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