Hello everyone,
I've been reading around here for a while and picking up some great information, so thanks!
I've been toying around with electronics since childhood, mostly solid state stuff, but as I also play guitar I have long held an interest in valve/tube circuits and sounds.
After spending a chunk of life on career training and starting a family, I have returned to both guitar and electronics. I started on germanium fuzz pedals, then graduated to building my own version of a 5F2a fender princeton, which I have recently completed. So now for the next project.
My theory is very sketchy, but I am finding the internet a great place to learn, and I eventually stumbled across this here forum, and have been a regular reader since. So please forgive me when I repeatedly ask stupid questions, hopefully my questions will gradually become less stupid. Maybe one day I'll be able to answer someone's question
Recently I was cleaning up my parents shed, and came upon a few cardboard boxes of used valves . Turns out my father had bought part of an old valve powered computer, and had pulled a bunch of valves from it.
So I set myself a new project - to design and build a great sounding guitar amp just using this stash.
Before this find I had been planning to build a souped-up Vox AC10, but I am hopeful that I can get vox-ish enough sounds from this new build.
The Found Valves - mostly Brimar - are
12AU7 - twin triode
ECF82/6U8 - triode & pentode - as used in vox ac10!
12BH7 - twin triode
6AL5 - twin diode
There are at least a dozen of each of these.
I want to keep the design very simple (at first), but with 2 input channels with different tones (that can be jumpered), bright switches and volume on each channel, master top cut and master volume.
So I'm thinking to use both sides of the ECF82 for the inputs, one triode and one pentode, along the lines of the normal channel from both the vox ac10 (triode) and the ac15 (pentode - ac15 used an EF86)
Feed both of these to a long tailed PI using a 12AU7, past a top cut and master volume to a push-pull class AB 12BH7, as per the "Moonlight", giving around 5 Watts output.
So now.....
Questions
1 - I am contemplating using the 6AL5 as the cathode bypass on both the input stages. I have lots of them! But is this worth doing, or should I stick with standard R & C setup? I like bass, and want to fully bypass these stages, but I would like a tight response, and have read that diode bypassing might give the best of both worlds.
2 - How much gain do I need? I mostly use single coils, and I only want the amp to get into 'overdrive', not high gain territory. Triode stage gain is ~ 40, PI is ~ 15. Is this enough, or do I need to add another gain stage pre-PI?
Thanks in advance if any of you can help me out. Once I get these questions sorted I'll put up my circuit for advice/criticism.
Cheers
I've been reading around here for a while and picking up some great information, so thanks!
I've been toying around with electronics since childhood, mostly solid state stuff, but as I also play guitar I have long held an interest in valve/tube circuits and sounds.
After spending a chunk of life on career training and starting a family, I have returned to both guitar and electronics. I started on germanium fuzz pedals, then graduated to building my own version of a 5F2a fender princeton, which I have recently completed. So now for the next project.
My theory is very sketchy, but I am finding the internet a great place to learn, and I eventually stumbled across this here forum, and have been a regular reader since. So please forgive me when I repeatedly ask stupid questions, hopefully my questions will gradually become less stupid. Maybe one day I'll be able to answer someone's question
Recently I was cleaning up my parents shed, and came upon a few cardboard boxes of used valves . Turns out my father had bought part of an old valve powered computer, and had pulled a bunch of valves from it.
So I set myself a new project - to design and build a great sounding guitar amp just using this stash.
Before this find I had been planning to build a souped-up Vox AC10, but I am hopeful that I can get vox-ish enough sounds from this new build.
The Found Valves - mostly Brimar - are
12AU7 - twin triode
ECF82/6U8 - triode & pentode - as used in vox ac10!
12BH7 - twin triode
6AL5 - twin diode
There are at least a dozen of each of these.
I want to keep the design very simple (at first), but with 2 input channels with different tones (that can be jumpered), bright switches and volume on each channel, master top cut and master volume.
So I'm thinking to use both sides of the ECF82 for the inputs, one triode and one pentode, along the lines of the normal channel from both the vox ac10 (triode) and the ac15 (pentode - ac15 used an EF86)
Feed both of these to a long tailed PI using a 12AU7, past a top cut and master volume to a push-pull class AB 12BH7, as per the "Moonlight", giving around 5 Watts output.
So now.....
Questions
1 - I am contemplating using the 6AL5 as the cathode bypass on both the input stages. I have lots of them! But is this worth doing, or should I stick with standard R & C setup? I like bass, and want to fully bypass these stages, but I would like a tight response, and have read that diode bypassing might give the best of both worlds.
2 - How much gain do I need? I mostly use single coils, and I only want the amp to get into 'overdrive', not high gain territory. Triode stage gain is ~ 40, PI is ~ 15. Is this enough, or do I need to add another gain stage pre-PI?
Thanks in advance if any of you can help me out. Once I get these questions sorted I'll put up my circuit for advice/criticism.
Cheers
Comment