Just wanted to get some comments on this. I've acquired a 6505-Plus for basically no $$. I've fixed dozens, if not hundreds, of these things over the years, and know the circuit really well. I've modded a few of them when players requested it -- adjustable bias, lowpass filters, adding chokes, whatever.
Anyway, since the Plus/II model has independent clean/dirty channels, it's sort of a closer cousin to the SLO than the original 5150. For this project, I'm ignoring the clean channel and may return to it later. I can work on the drive channel without altering the clean sound in any way, unlike the original 5150. I'm just curious about what's possible, and more about the relationship between the 5150 and its obvious progenitor the SLO... they do sound different (though not much), and I mainly just want to nail down which differences are mostly responsible for that. Is it just component values, or do component materials/selection matter as well? People who want to justify their $3.5k invesment in an SLO often say buzzwords like "mil-spec construction" but I have no idea whether the components themselves matter anywhere near as much as their actual values or the layout.
If you convert the 6505+ component values in the first two gain stages to 5150-I values, those are in fact also the SLO values for those stages. I'm going to do that (not shown below). The +/II model already has the correct tone stack values for the SLO, where the 'I' model had an extra treble cap. I also know that the SLO's power stage is 'nicer' than this amp, given that it has a choke and more normal screen resistor values. Might do that too, but I suspect it's not that big a deal.
Beyond these things, it seems like the differences are just minor lowpass filtering differences (probably changes made by Peavey to avoid getting sued?), except for the cathode followers. The SLO has two of them, DC coupled -- one to drive the FX loop, then another for the tone stack. The Peaveys just use an anode follower for the tone stack.
Below is what I drew up on the 6505+ schem, based on comparing schematics with the SLO. Looks like I wouldn't have to cut any traces even!
SLO schem I'm using: Prowess Amplifiers - Misc - Schematics - Soldano SLO100
6505+ schem: http://schems.com/manu/peavey/peavey_5150-II.pdf
Any thoughts on this? I'm wondering whether the perceived greater clarity and thickness in the SLO has to do with the DC coupled CF stages and all the 2nd-harmonic content they add, along with the lower output Z driving the tone stack. Plus I ASSUME that the Peavey anode follower is being overdriven normally, and I have no idea how AF overdrive sounds compared to CF overdrive. Plus there's the fact that CF-driven tone stacks have slew rate limiting in cutoff, which adds its own character.
(I don't care about the amp's resale value and already have all needed parts on hand.)
Anyway, since the Plus/II model has independent clean/dirty channels, it's sort of a closer cousin to the SLO than the original 5150. For this project, I'm ignoring the clean channel and may return to it later. I can work on the drive channel without altering the clean sound in any way, unlike the original 5150. I'm just curious about what's possible, and more about the relationship between the 5150 and its obvious progenitor the SLO... they do sound different (though not much), and I mainly just want to nail down which differences are mostly responsible for that. Is it just component values, or do component materials/selection matter as well? People who want to justify their $3.5k invesment in an SLO often say buzzwords like "mil-spec construction" but I have no idea whether the components themselves matter anywhere near as much as their actual values or the layout.
If you convert the 6505+ component values in the first two gain stages to 5150-I values, those are in fact also the SLO values for those stages. I'm going to do that (not shown below). The +/II model already has the correct tone stack values for the SLO, where the 'I' model had an extra treble cap. I also know that the SLO's power stage is 'nicer' than this amp, given that it has a choke and more normal screen resistor values. Might do that too, but I suspect it's not that big a deal.
Beyond these things, it seems like the differences are just minor lowpass filtering differences (probably changes made by Peavey to avoid getting sued?), except for the cathode followers. The SLO has two of them, DC coupled -- one to drive the FX loop, then another for the tone stack. The Peaveys just use an anode follower for the tone stack.
Below is what I drew up on the 6505+ schem, based on comparing schematics with the SLO. Looks like I wouldn't have to cut any traces even!
SLO schem I'm using: Prowess Amplifiers - Misc - Schematics - Soldano SLO100
6505+ schem: http://schems.com/manu/peavey/peavey_5150-II.pdf
Any thoughts on this? I'm wondering whether the perceived greater clarity and thickness in the SLO has to do with the DC coupled CF stages and all the 2nd-harmonic content they add, along with the lower output Z driving the tone stack. Plus I ASSUME that the Peavey anode follower is being overdriven normally, and I have no idea how AF overdrive sounds compared to CF overdrive. Plus there's the fact that CF-driven tone stacks have slew rate limiting in cutoff, which adds its own character.
(I don't care about the amp's resale value and already have all needed parts on hand.)
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