I've finally managed to make some progress on my Ninja-Deluxe amp project, though it's still nowhere near finished. It's built into a 5E3 cabinet from TAD, but that's about all it has in common with a 5E3: it's more like a tweed version of a Mesa-Boogified Princeton.
It uses the transformers and choke from a 1970s aluminium front Selmer Treble'N'Bass 50, so it has a diode bridge rectifier and will be good for 50 watts. If it weren't for the diode rectifier, I couldn't have fitted all this junk into such a small cabinet. On account of all the extra transformer iron and the big ceramic speaker magnet, it weighs in at 40lbs! The chassis is held in by four bolts to spread the weight more evenly: two through the top, and one through each side.
I'm keeping the basic T'n'B 50 circuit, except I added tube-driven spring reverb, channel switching, and an extra EF86 gain stage to one of the channels. I had already done these mods on the original T'n'B 50 head, but when a number of components went bad and there was nowhere to mount the reverb pan, I decided to take it completely apart and start again.
As with my last homebuilt amp, I made a subchassis on rubber shock mounts for the tubes, and fitted a cathode current meter. I made the chassis myself out of 1/8" aluminium, and the faceplate was laser cut and engraved out of 1/8" clear plexiglass. It will be edge-lit by bright orange LEDs when I'm finished with it.
It uses the transformers and choke from a 1970s aluminium front Selmer Treble'N'Bass 50, so it has a diode bridge rectifier and will be good for 50 watts. If it weren't for the diode rectifier, I couldn't have fitted all this junk into such a small cabinet. On account of all the extra transformer iron and the big ceramic speaker magnet, it weighs in at 40lbs! The chassis is held in by four bolts to spread the weight more evenly: two through the top, and one through each side.
I'm keeping the basic T'n'B 50 circuit, except I added tube-driven spring reverb, channel switching, and an extra EF86 gain stage to one of the channels. I had already done these mods on the original T'n'B 50 head, but when a number of components went bad and there was nowhere to mount the reverb pan, I decided to take it completely apart and start again.
As with my last homebuilt amp, I made a subchassis on rubber shock mounts for the tubes, and fitted a cathode current meter. I made the chassis myself out of 1/8" aluminium, and the faceplate was laser cut and engraved out of 1/8" clear plexiglass. It will be edge-lit by bright orange LEDs when I'm finished with it.
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