Several years ago, I donated a boatload of old Univox schematics to www.univox.org to scan for their website. Here's another link:
http://www.univox.org/pics/schematics/u45b.jpg
BTW- there is MUCH room for improvement at the first input stage of these amps. It uses a "contact bias" or "grid leak" bias system, whereas there is no cathode resistor or cap, similar to something like an old 5C3 Deluxe. The bias voltage is developed across the series input cap, which charges via the input signal, going to the grid and the 4.7M is there to provide a high time constant for the cap while providing a load for the grid. If you remove and jump the series .01 cap, open the tube's cathode connection to ground and add a 1.5K resistor and 22/25 cap in series with the cathode to ground, then the 4.7M resistor to 1M, the amp will be able to handle hotter signals and stay cleaner. It becomes your typical BF preamp stage.
http://www.univox.org/pics/schematics/u45b.jpg
BTW- there is MUCH room for improvement at the first input stage of these amps. It uses a "contact bias" or "grid leak" bias system, whereas there is no cathode resistor or cap, similar to something like an old 5C3 Deluxe. The bias voltage is developed across the series input cap, which charges via the input signal, going to the grid and the 4.7M is there to provide a high time constant for the cap while providing a load for the grid. If you remove and jump the series .01 cap, open the tube's cathode connection to ground and add a 1.5K resistor and 22/25 cap in series with the cathode to ground, then the 4.7M resistor to 1M, the amp will be able to handle hotter signals and stay cleaner. It becomes your typical BF preamp stage.
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