Thought i would share my first amp building experience with everyone here.Late last year i acquired an old 1940's "Webster Teletalk".which is a vintage,valve driven office intercom system.here is a short description of what i have done so far.
i stripped the switchboard and all the wire (original cloth coated, stranded) which was still clean and unstained as it had been wrapped up all these years in an outer layer of cloth,will save this for future "vintage upgrades" on a strat and a tele project i have waiting in the wings.
pulled the chassis and took it over to Alan(Unparalled) at Anvil amps to find out which bits were worth keeping.while i was there he gave me the bits i needed to get started.
- Aluminium extrusion - for the chassis
- a clear polycarbonate tag/component board for a 5E3 clone, which was easily modified for the 5F2 circuit that i had planned to build.
started parting out the chassis.at some stage the original PT ,which had been 115 volt ac primary , had been replaced with a 230volt ac primary, which was useful as was the OT, just needed to figure out correct primary/ secondary wiring connections.
the valve compliment consisted of 1 x metal cased 5W4 rectifier,1 x 6F6 output and 1 x metal cased 6J7 pre-amp,all octal.the rectifier and the output valve was used.i already had noval sockets and a few pre-amp valves 12au7/ECC82,12ax7/ECC83 which i can swap around later.
purchased 2 x 1meg pots for the tone and volume controls, i already had pilot light, on/off switch,input/speaker jacks,fuse holder and some IEC connectors that had been salvaged from dead computer power supplies. plenty of hook-up wire from them that i used also.
needed to trim some length of the tag/component board to fit,cut out the hole for the IEC connector,drilled hole for fuse holder,positioned PT and OT,valve sockets on the main part of the chassis for drilling, done at Anvil Amps as i didn't have the right chassis stamps or hole saws,drilled all the holes for the input jack,switch,pilot light and tone/volume controls in front panel of the sub-chassis.
partly assembled the chassis,mounted the unpopulated tag board,front panel(light,switch,pots and input jacks),IEC connector,fuse holder, and headed over to Anvil amps to work out where the best place would be to drill the valve socket holes.
had originally wanted to use 1 of the chokes that i had salvaged,but it was a pain to try and mount it out of view.so following a layout for a 5F2a clone i found on the net( pdf by "Steve Milberger" a regular contributor to the "Blue Guitar website).Alan and i began to populate the tag/component board.
back at home i mounted the valve sockets then worked out the best way to run the filament low-voltage supply and the grounding for tidy lead dress. got lots of info for grounding techniques from articles posted here (Merlin Blencowe) and from the EL84 website
hooked up all the low voltage,made all the connections between output valve,OT,output jack and tagboard and then pre-amp,tone/volume pots and tagboard
i prepared a smaller tagboard for PT 230v supply / 6.3v heater supply and filament virtual ground and mounted that directly underneath the place where i mounted the PT, then every thing was soldered up.
i stripped the switchboard and all the wire (original cloth coated, stranded) which was still clean and unstained as it had been wrapped up all these years in an outer layer of cloth,will save this for future "vintage upgrades" on a strat and a tele project i have waiting in the wings.
pulled the chassis and took it over to Alan(Unparalled) at Anvil amps to find out which bits were worth keeping.while i was there he gave me the bits i needed to get started.
- Aluminium extrusion - for the chassis
- a clear polycarbonate tag/component board for a 5E3 clone, which was easily modified for the 5F2 circuit that i had planned to build.
started parting out the chassis.at some stage the original PT ,which had been 115 volt ac primary , had been replaced with a 230volt ac primary, which was useful as was the OT, just needed to figure out correct primary/ secondary wiring connections.
the valve compliment consisted of 1 x metal cased 5W4 rectifier,1 x 6F6 output and 1 x metal cased 6J7 pre-amp,all octal.the rectifier and the output valve was used.i already had noval sockets and a few pre-amp valves 12au7/ECC82,12ax7/ECC83 which i can swap around later.
purchased 2 x 1meg pots for the tone and volume controls, i already had pilot light, on/off switch,input/speaker jacks,fuse holder and some IEC connectors that had been salvaged from dead computer power supplies. plenty of hook-up wire from them that i used also.
needed to trim some length of the tag/component board to fit,cut out the hole for the IEC connector,drilled hole for fuse holder,positioned PT and OT,valve sockets on the main part of the chassis for drilling, done at Anvil Amps as i didn't have the right chassis stamps or hole saws,drilled all the holes for the input jack,switch,pilot light and tone/volume controls in front panel of the sub-chassis.
partly assembled the chassis,mounted the unpopulated tag board,front panel(light,switch,pots and input jacks),IEC connector,fuse holder, and headed over to Anvil amps to work out where the best place would be to drill the valve socket holes.
had originally wanted to use 1 of the chokes that i had salvaged,but it was a pain to try and mount it out of view.so following a layout for a 5F2a clone i found on the net( pdf by "Steve Milberger" a regular contributor to the "Blue Guitar website).Alan and i began to populate the tag/component board.
back at home i mounted the valve sockets then worked out the best way to run the filament low-voltage supply and the grounding for tidy lead dress. got lots of info for grounding techniques from articles posted here (Merlin Blencowe) and from the EL84 website
hooked up all the low voltage,made all the connections between output valve,OT,output jack and tagboard and then pre-amp,tone/volume pots and tagboard
i prepared a smaller tagboard for PT 230v supply / 6.3v heater supply and filament virtual ground and mounted that directly underneath the place where i mounted the PT, then every thing was soldered up.
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