As some of you know, I'm building my own little Marshall amp. It is a head version of the 1974X baby blues breaker. It is 18 watts of tube power.
I am putting this thread in the vets board for one big reason. Tube equipment is deadly.
So;
THIS THREAD IS FOR ENTERTAINMENT ONLY. IN NO WAY DOES IT ENCOURAGE THE READER TO REPEAT ANYTHING THAT THE ORGINAL POSTER HAS DONE. TUBE AMPS CONTAIN DEADLY VOLTAGES. PLEASE TAKE ANY AND ALL VACUUM TUBE EQUIPMENT TO A QUALIFIED TECH FOR ANY AND ALL MAINTANCE.
I chose the 18 watt Marshall kit because of it's ability to do Led Zep, ACDC, and other 60s/70s rock tones and a some what low volume. It's still fucking load, but no where near as bad as say Josh's Orange.
For the kit I decided to go with GDS's 18 watt kit. Unlike many other 18 watt kits, this kit is a pure clone of the original circuit. Most 18 watt kits these days are TMB, meaning they have treble middle and bass controls and no tremolo. One of the nice things about the GDS kit is that it comes with a how to manual and many American made parts. However, this comes at a cost. The GDS kit is probably the most expensive 18 watt kit on the market right now.
Sound samples
http://www.gdsamps.com/mp3.html
I used Christmas money, birthday money, and some ebay money to get the kit. I received around the middle of last semester.
Here are some pics of then
Tools
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...t/P0006204.jpg
kit parts
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...t/P0006206.jpg
front with tube sockets and pots installed
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...t/P0006210.jpg
The inside with just the tube sockets and Out Put Transformer installed
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...t/P0006212.jpg
Inside with the heater wires installed
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...t/P0006217.jpg
The heater wires are used to send AC current to the vacuum tubes so they can work their magic.
Why are they twisted? The twisting doesn't matter as much as the closeness of the wire. AC current goes back and forth. This can cause hum inside audio equipment. To minimize this, the AC heater wires are kept close together so that the motion of the AC current on each wire can cancel out the effects of the other.
MORE TO COME LATER
