While mulling over a new build, I recall the discussion a bit ago about part layouts. The agreement seemed to fall on the side of "keep high impedance lines short" so layouts should favor part positions near grids or whatever the higher-impedance connection is. Makes sense to me... but what about power and ground layout within a chassis. Many amps (classic Fenders) have controls on the front, tubes along the back, and circuit boards in the middle. The classic ground scheme is to route grounds near the the pots (front) and power towards the tubes (back). That means cathode circuits and grid leaks are relatively far from ground, while plate loads are relatively near power. Does this make sense? In mulling it over, I'm coming out in favor of running grounds near the tubes to minimize path lengths for grid leaks and cathode circuits. Those grounds seem more critical (noise-wise) than the pot connections for tone stack, vol, etc.
History shows that good performance can come from the traditional approach, but perhaps things get even better with ground layouts nearer the tubes.
Any thoughts or arguments either way on this?
History shows that good performance can come from the traditional approach, but perhaps things get even better with ground layouts nearer the tubes.
Any thoughts or arguments either way on this?
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