I've been doing a little reading here and I've decided to ask a few questions. A few years ago I bought a 5E3+ kit from TubeDepot. I've since built one of their Marshall kits (head only). Last winter I finally got around to building the 5E3+ (the plus is their designation).
I've been working on tube gear for a while, 10 years or so I'd guess, so still a newb. Prior to contracting Ilikebuildingguitaramps disease I worked on Ham radio, AM radio, FM radio, and lots of little circuit board projects (I have a board mill so prototyping can be quick, or incendiary), still do.
I restored a '66 Blackface Fender Bandmaster before building the Tweed, and before the Bandmaster I restored my favorite little amp, a Gretsch G6151T. . I moved away from buying kits after the Marshall kit. It sounds good but I don't have a cab for it and the test cab was a Silvertone XL??? cab that I plan to use with the 1484 that I am almost finished repairing. I have the parts for 4 more Fender style amps (Hoffman eyelet boards) to build. I like tubes, they teach me things. I'd also add that Televisions used to smell nice when they were on and were much more interesting than today.
Back to the amp. It makes horrible sounds when I play my guitar thru it... because I suck at playing guitar. The amp actually sounds very good (to my less than sensitive ears).
Let's get to the point, I think the amp is biased hot, like very hot. If it's not I'd appreciate an explanation for why not.
I built it cathode biased. I can mod it for fixed bias. I can also switch a jumper for negative feedback. Right now the jumper is "out". I'm using a EuroTubes bias checker (because I'm lazy and having my hand in my pocket is distracting).
48.4mA
388VDC
No matter how many times I put the numbers into the calculator I get 18.78W
Bias resistors are 220kΩ and verified
Speaker (not that it matters unless it's not plugged in): Jensen MOD 12/50 8Ω
The two JJ 6V6's current draw isn't far apart, about 0.1mA. It's been like this since I built it. I didn't notice it at first because I looked at 6L6 data when I was checking it (derp). The photo below is from the initial power up and nothing has changed. The test leads went to a Fluke meter to check voltage against the EuroTubes widget. It matched:
It has a circuit board (not a fan) and I've checked every component numerous times. The components all match the schematic and layout . And the amp sounds good. Loud... I can't crank it much. Even at 2 it takes very little guitar volume to make it neighbor unfriendly with just a little twist on the guitar volume knob. Like I said, I think it's biased hot but it matches the schematic. I guess I should include that...
At the moment my photo hosting site isn't working (again) so I can't upload a finished shot of the board. If that's necessary I'll keep trying.
Thoughts?
PS- Here's the before of the tops side of the Silvertone 1484 chassis. This is the nice part )
Front
After a little cleaning
I've been working on tube gear for a while, 10 years or so I'd guess, so still a newb. Prior to contracting Ilikebuildingguitaramps disease I worked on Ham radio, AM radio, FM radio, and lots of little circuit board projects (I have a board mill so prototyping can be quick, or incendiary), still do.
I restored a '66 Blackface Fender Bandmaster before building the Tweed, and before the Bandmaster I restored my favorite little amp, a Gretsch G6151T. . I moved away from buying kits after the Marshall kit. It sounds good but I don't have a cab for it and the test cab was a Silvertone XL??? cab that I plan to use with the 1484 that I am almost finished repairing. I have the parts for 4 more Fender style amps (Hoffman eyelet boards) to build. I like tubes, they teach me things. I'd also add that Televisions used to smell nice when they were on and were much more interesting than today.
Back to the amp. It makes horrible sounds when I play my guitar thru it... because I suck at playing guitar. The amp actually sounds very good (to my less than sensitive ears).
Let's get to the point, I think the amp is biased hot, like very hot. If it's not I'd appreciate an explanation for why not.
I built it cathode biased. I can mod it for fixed bias. I can also switch a jumper for negative feedback. Right now the jumper is "out". I'm using a EuroTubes bias checker (because I'm lazy and having my hand in my pocket is distracting).
48.4mA
388VDC
No matter how many times I put the numbers into the calculator I get 18.78W
Bias resistors are 220kΩ and verified
Speaker (not that it matters unless it's not plugged in): Jensen MOD 12/50 8Ω
The two JJ 6V6's current draw isn't far apart, about 0.1mA. It's been like this since I built it. I didn't notice it at first because I looked at 6L6 data when I was checking it (derp). The photo below is from the initial power up and nothing has changed. The test leads went to a Fluke meter to check voltage against the EuroTubes widget. It matched:
It has a circuit board (not a fan) and I've checked every component numerous times. The components all match the schematic and layout . And the amp sounds good. Loud... I can't crank it much. Even at 2 it takes very little guitar volume to make it neighbor unfriendly with just a little twist on the guitar volume knob. Like I said, I think it's biased hot but it matches the schematic. I guess I should include that...
At the moment my photo hosting site isn't working (again) so I can't upload a finished shot of the board. If that's necessary I'll keep trying.
Thoughts?
PS- Here's the before of the tops side of the Silvertone 1484 chassis. This is the nice part )
Front
After a little cleaning
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