This is inspired by the discussion we had here:
Question about Pentode reverb drive circuit
The impetus for that topic was the born out of trying to retrofit my buddy's Silvertone 1474 with a quality spring reverb; using the existing power supply, and trying to maintain the original preamp topology.
That only left me one tube to drive the transmission line, recover the gain, and mix the wet and dry signals. Since that was my first attempt at designing and building any reverb circuit, getting the noise rejection, gain performance, and overall stability proved to be a much bigger challenge than I anticipated.
How did it all turn out?..... pretty good But there are some things I would've done differently in hindsight in order to make it a better fit with the silvertone. The reverb I chose for the project was the long delay 9 series because, go big or go home I thought. However, the only realistic location to mount the tank was in the cabinet below the speakers. Because of the material and way the Silvertones were built (cheaply!), the cabinets can suffer from heavy acoustic vibration during output. That, combined with the long decay of the tank made it very susceptible to acoustic feedback and instability. But, man, there was a lot there to love and I've been thinking about it ever since.
I've been thinking about taking a different approach to designing a stand alone tube reverb/preamp than what I've seen commercially available or in DIY builds. Because of the size of traditional spring tanks, transformers (power and reverb driver), and tubes themselves, these often end up being the size of small head cabs. We don't have to use any of those things.
The design concept is this: Develop a modern, miniature, all tube stand-alone spring reverb unit using Acutronics miniature Blue Reverb; SMPS boost converter with an input of 12V DC for the Heaters and HT power supply; 6943 Subminiature Pentodes for the reverb current drive and virtual earth mixer stage, and 6111 Subminiature twin triodes for the preamp circuitry.
Acutronics Blue Reverb:
One of five 6943s I just picked up: (but I also have a bunch of 6111s)
6943 curves for a screen voltage of 125V:
6111 twin triode curves:
Open Source HV boost converter designed by Jan Rychter:
https://jan.rychter.com/high-voltage...-tube-projects
HV PSU 2.3-2014-05-03.zip
HV PSU 2.3 Schematic.pdf
More to follow. Now, I sleep....
Question about Pentode reverb drive circuit
The impetus for that topic was the born out of trying to retrofit my buddy's Silvertone 1474 with a quality spring reverb; using the existing power supply, and trying to maintain the original preamp topology.
That only left me one tube to drive the transmission line, recover the gain, and mix the wet and dry signals. Since that was my first attempt at designing and building any reverb circuit, getting the noise rejection, gain performance, and overall stability proved to be a much bigger challenge than I anticipated.
How did it all turn out?..... pretty good But there are some things I would've done differently in hindsight in order to make it a better fit with the silvertone. The reverb I chose for the project was the long delay 9 series because, go big or go home I thought. However, the only realistic location to mount the tank was in the cabinet below the speakers. Because of the material and way the Silvertones were built (cheaply!), the cabinets can suffer from heavy acoustic vibration during output. That, combined with the long decay of the tank made it very susceptible to acoustic feedback and instability. But, man, there was a lot there to love and I've been thinking about it ever since.
I've been thinking about taking a different approach to designing a stand alone tube reverb/preamp than what I've seen commercially available or in DIY builds. Because of the size of traditional spring tanks, transformers (power and reverb driver), and tubes themselves, these often end up being the size of small head cabs. We don't have to use any of those things.
The design concept is this: Develop a modern, miniature, all tube stand-alone spring reverb unit using Acutronics miniature Blue Reverb; SMPS boost converter with an input of 12V DC for the Heaters and HT power supply; 6943 Subminiature Pentodes for the reverb current drive and virtual earth mixer stage, and 6111 Subminiature twin triodes for the preamp circuitry.
Acutronics Blue Reverb:
One of five 6943s I just picked up: (but I also have a bunch of 6111s)
6943 curves for a screen voltage of 125V:
6111 twin triode curves:
Open Source HV boost converter designed by Jan Rychter:
https://jan.rychter.com/high-voltage...-tube-projects
HV PSU 2.3-2014-05-03.zip
HV PSU 2.3 Schematic.pdf
More to follow. Now, I sleep....
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