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Vacuum tube amp build

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WeldingRod:
Now that I have a functioning loaner computer, its time to get serious about a build log!
 My son and I are building a vacuum tube guitar amplifier.  I've built semiconductor amplifiers, but always had some interest in vacuum tubes (and my dad built some when he was a kid).  The whole guitar "I WANT distortion" is kind of weird for me too.  But, its shop time for me and Carl!

 To get started, we did some CAD.  IE, Cardboard Assisted Design ;-)

After some layout work, we had a full size amp box and started thinking about where the guts go.

 Nothing like full scale to get a feel for something!  FYI, the CANARY cardboard shears from Amazon are OMG great!
 The black rectangle on the right  is the vacuum tube equivalent of a PCB; a turret board.  Hoffman Amplifiers came through with a whole slew of parts; the BOM for a Fender Champ plus some stuff to get to a Princeton (adds a tone control).  Carl and I both liked the idea of the Vox attenuator (switchable output power of 4, 1, and 1/4 Watt).  The reason this is cool is that you can get the over-driven sound without frying your (or your Dad's) ears.  Vox's design was for a 16 Ohm speaker, but I was easily able to modify it to 8 Ohm.  And, go to a proper film capacitor (white cylinder) rather than those foolish back to back electrolytic combinations!.  He also dreams of a "gain control", whatever that is.  Thus, we have a knob without a plan ;-)

 Vacuum tube stuff is kind of weird relative to what I've done before!  This is a photo of my last speaker build (back in the 90's).  I built the preamp with the crossover for bi-amplification, and a special filter for a 4th or 5th order alignment on the bass section (I can't remember the official term now).  Basically, you design the speaker and enclosure with a complementary electrical filter so that the combination has flat response to a lower frequency that you could get with just the speaker/enclosure combination.  I used an isobaric configuration (two woofers per enclosure with a short tube between them); this improved the "Spouse Acceptance Factor" by cutting the enclosure size in half.  Even though she wasn't my spouse yet, I was planning ahead!  The black enclosure is the 150 Watt per channel amp I built to go with it.  The other amp is for the mid/tweeter.  Anyway, historic stuff for reference

WeldingRod:
Based on the cardboard, I figured out what the enclosure needed to look like.

Carl dreamed up a metal grille for the speaker based on a carpet pattern, and I got it plasma cut.

I modified my 3 in 1 sheet metal machine so I could hang stuff out the ends and progressively bend it.  The tension bars were cast iron (WTF???), so super easy to machine.  I, um broke one the first time I tried it on 16 gauge SST.  I got fresh 5/8" plates cut, machined holes, and then found out that I had missed by about 0.1" on the center to center, so the shear didn't work right.  Scream.  My favorite work welders let me use their bender...

WeldingRod:
And yes, this is going to look a bit steampunk-y soon ;-)
 Lots of quality time fettling the (temporary) front panel to fit the various jacks, pots, meter, etc.

Amazon shipped my 1/8" PCB stock via USPS.  Somebody (who has to remain nameless since I don't know who) marked the dratted thing as delivered, then held onto it for an extra week before finally delivering it.  Still, we got to get stuff screwed in place.

And start soldering with the SERIOUS soldering tool  ;-)  For bonus fun, the tip broke the next day.  Turns out 16 gauge house wire works just fine...

The front panel is fiddly...  My fancy cloth covered wire is a bit big for the attenuator switch lugs.

WeldingRod:
Carl wanted to etch a pattern into the front panel so it could glow.  Quality time with tape, a protractor, knife, and scriber:

 Here's post-etch, with some of the tape scraped off.

 Stuck on the chassis with a couple of 6-32 -HEX- screws.  Yes, they make them!

 And with some battery powered LEDs stuck in there for a light check.  Gotta get brighter ones for sure, but it will look cool on a darkened stage!  Assuming Carl gets to that point.  Pretty likely, as he seems to have already formed a sort of "empty rent house" band.  Yes, it includes plastic buckets for percussion and a saxophone.  They've recenty recruited a keyboard player.  Work with what you've got ;-)

WeldingRod:
Here's a rough idea of what its going to look like with the grille.  We are going to run wires down one of the grille bars and light up the speaker cone with some blue leds too.  Yes, its one of the two dummy front panels...

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