Figured I'd introduce myself. Also want to say thanks for this excellent amp forum. I've learned a lot, and need to learn a LOT more.
I am an amateur amp-tinkerer. Had a couple of years formal electronics education primarily focused on vacuum tubes (yes, a few decades ago).
I'm basically a guitar player that had to learn to repair/mod gear for myself and band-mates out of necessity. Until last year I had never built a tube amp from scratch. I had a Sovtek MIG50 that was due for a cap-job. While I was in there I decided to mount the pots on the chassis and fly the leads to the board. I've worked on Fender amps with eyelet boards and am comfortable in that environment. I don't like working on PCBs, and in the case of the MIG50 it turned out to be a disaster. The flimsy solder pads were lifting off the board very easily. Out of disgust and desperation I elected to jettison the PCB and rebuild on a sturdy G10 turret board of my own contruction. The project went through several phases where I tried adopting aspects aspects of a JTM45, and finally married the MIG50 circuit with a Deluxe Reverb transformer set to tame the overall volume (50 watts is too much for the clubs I play). Since a picture is worth a thousands words ..... I'll spare you reading much more by including a few.
Here is a "before" shot:
http://homepage.mac.com/swamptone/Sovte ... Before.jpg
Here is the "after" shot (confirms my amateur standing):
http://homepage.mac.com/swamptone/NickTek-Guts.jpg
An iteration of the main board (before changing out iron, which required rectifier change):
http://homepage.mac.com/swamptone/NickTek-50-Board.jpg
Here is a top shot showing Deluxe Reverb iron:
http://homepage.mac.com/swamptone/NickTek-Top2.jpg
The amp works well, has decent tone, and is reasonably quiet even when dimed. The volume level fits my needs. Someday I'll revisit a few "issues" that cropped up during the build. But I can say with some assurance I'll think long-and-hard before I ever again attempt to reverse-engineer another tube amp with scant documentation out there. Fools rush in where heroes fear to tread. Yep, that's me!
I've learned a lot from this forum. Wish I'd found it sooner. Again, sincere thanks to all for sharing your knowledge and love of tube-circuits. I am grateful.
Nest Wishes,
Nick