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Totally NOT corona project - scratch built a guitar amp

70herald

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Well enough of the corona projects..

Over the last year my son and I built a 1957 Fender Tweed Princeton clone amp from scratch.
This is a small (about 5 w) practice amp - but way more than powerful enough for the house. Clapton apparently recorded a few songs in studio using this type but his was probably an original.
No hum or other background noise, just a nice clean electric guitar sound.


Wooden case made out of a shelf, joints were dovetailed for strength, and because that is how the originals were made.
IMG_20190213_215444.jpg

Small mess of electronics. The chassis started out as a flat Al plate, all the electronics were point to point wired. Actually fender would have used an eyelet board but this worked just as well.
IMG_20190812_213046.jpg

Ready to rock. Putting the tweed fabric on was a giant pain and if I ever make another one it is going to have an easier to apply finish! We got the fabric pattern to line up correctly on the top. Some sort of leatherette would have been 1000% easier and less stressful to apply.
20200525_101244.jpg

So I know there are a few guitar players / restorers in BCF land anyone else build an amp?
 

Mickey Richaud

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Beautiful work! :eagerness:
 

DrEntropy

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Nicely done, Izz! :thumbsup:

My old man would build high fidelity and later, stereo amps & pre-amps on our dining room table, starting with paper bags full of component parts and aluminum sheets. Last one was a 500W per channel, driving a pair of Altec-Lansing "Voice of the Theater" speakers. No matter what folks say about solid-state sound systems, IMHO a vacuum tube rig beats 'em all.
 
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70herald

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No kit involved.
I took a readily available schematic, ordered all the parts needed ( mostly from tubedepot.com) , a few terminal strips and put it all together.

The case used to be a shelf until it had a close encounter with my table saw.
I worked out dimensions and layout by measuring off of a few decent pictures of originals on Reverb.com. Since the original speaker was 8" diameter I used that as a reference to work out all other dimensions.

To learn the special techniques needed for tube wiring (point to point), working the filament circuit without causing hum, biasing tube amps, and getting the tweed material onto the case I studied a few amp restorers / builders on YouTube.

The only advantage of a kit is that it would have had nice silk screened graphics on the control panel. I tried making water transfer decals but they didn't look very good and with only 2 knobs and an on off switch not really needed.
 

Gliderman8

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Did anyone build a Heathkit?
My Heathkit digital alarm clock is still on my night table and working fine after 30+ years since building it!
 

GregW

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No kit involved.
I took a readily available schematic, ordered all the parts needed ( mostly from tubedepot.com) , a few terminal strips and put it all together.
Well then my hat is REALLY off to you sir. The Stew Mac mentions Clapton as well.
I've been toying around with the thought of making a low wattage tube amp. Most on the market lack the bells and whistles of their bigger brothers. I'd have to cobble different schematics from the web together to make what I want (Which could end up bad for me). I do have a Hughes and Kettner Tubemeister 18 that I like a lot. It has a switch where I can dial it back to 1 watt for the bedroom.
 

DrEntropy

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Did anyone build a Heathkit?

Yup. I got the Heathkit projects to learn from. And Popular Electronics magazine. With the advent of transistors it was relaxation oscillators, flip-flop circuitry, thyristors. Lots of "bread-board" projects. Primitive by today's standards!

EDIT: In about '66 or '67 I built a wall recessed interval timer to use in the darkroom, to control the enlarger's exposure times.
 

Gliderman8

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Here's my Heathkit digital clock purring away...

 

DrEntropy

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I "bread-boarded" one of those clocks. Used the schematic from one of Radio Shack's "Projects" books. Set it into a clear Lucite housing. Sometime later I cobbled it to build something else, can't recall what that was.
 

Gliderman8

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I "bread-boarded" one of those clocks. Used the schematic from one of Radio Shack's "Projects" books. Set it into a clear Lucite housing. Sometime later I cobbled it to build something else, can't recall what that was.
Hard to believe the individual segments of the displays are still lighting up after all these years. The only complaint I have is that it is too bright at night... I think there was a photo-resister that was supposed to dim it in a dark environment.
 

DrEntropy

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Speaking of electronics "projects" here's the power supply from our 32" Emerson LED TV. This TV ran 24/7-365 for about four years, finally gave out. An E-Bay ad with one from a N.I.B. TV with a shipping damaged screen is on its way. Much easier to replace the P.S. board than to sit and go through discreet component diagnostics. Many other fish to fry! And I've become a bit lazy. :wink:

powerboard.jpg
 

pdplot

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My dad was a radio amateur. He used to take my brother and I into New York to the radio supply district on the lower East Side to buy parts. There were also several clothing stores in the neighborhood that employed "puller inners" - salesmen who stood out on the sidewalk and (almost) pulled you into the store to buy a suit or pair of pants. I think Radio Shack started down there. I also remember Lafayette Radio and there were a few others - all in the same block. That's the way they did it in New York. Electronic district, garment district, diamond district (still there), etc. Something has been lost.
 

Gliderman8

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My dad was a radio amateur. He used to take my brother and I into New York to the radio supply district on the lower East Side to buy parts. There were also several clothing stores in the neighborhood that employed "puller inners" - salesmen who stood out on the sidewalk and (almost) pulled you into the store to buy a suit or pair of pants. I think Radio Shack started down there. I also remember Lafayette Radio and there were a few others - all in the same block. That's the way they did it in New York. Electronic district, garment district, diamond district (still there), etc. Something has been lost.
Growing up in NY my parents always took me and my brother down to the Lower East Side. Clothes, food, electronics.... what fun haggling with the merchants. I always went to the Lafayette store in Syosset, Long Island.
I think I miss the food the most from that area.
 
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