The more accurate Rocket uses my "standard" PIO/polystyrene cap combo with Stancor iron. The PT I scored from Dynaman and the output transformer (Stancor A-3800) I had lying around. Only thing I changed was 0.033uF caps for the tonestack caps (for now) because I didn't have any high voltage 0.022uF guys sitting around at the time. Master volume is a dual 500k AB pot with 1.6M resistors strapped which give a nice transparency at higher volumes and a nice natural sweep when attenuating. This was my first Rocket build and I must say, it's a truly great sounding amp. I can definitely appreciate the lower gain (although it does get after it when cranked) and LOVE the cleans through both my 4x12 Vox cheapo cab and my EV SRO loaded 1x12 ported cab. I was actually building this for a friend but this is one of those builds that I don't want to let go. Instead I've gotten another A-3800 off of fleabay and will build him an amp when I find a suitable PT and chassis. This amp loves Bugle Boys in the preamp and good ol' American EL84's in the output section.
The second Rocket came about from wanting to do a 4x6V6 Rocket but not having appropriate iron to do so. What I did have was an old PT from a reel-to-reel player (250V @ 250mA and no CT) and pretty much everything else I would need for the build. Only catch is the PT doesn't have enough current on the 5V tap so I opted for just a bridge rectifier and a Zener to drop the B+ down to about 275V as the 6AQ5 datasheet calls for. The output transformer is a NOS Stancor A-3851, including the unused 10% inverse feedback windings. Since this transformer might not stay in this build (it's really for 6L6's), I left all of the leads at their super long length and tied them back as needed. I ended up with a 100 Ohm cathode resistor which put each tube at a hair over 40mA a piece, which was better than the 50 Ohm resistor both tonewise and for my B+ (which was dropped TOO much with the 50 Ohm resistor). As far as sound goes, I absolutely love it! Maybe even more so than my "real" Rocket clone. The PI and output stage seem to clip about the same as the real Rocket and the gain feels about the same but the amp itself is a bit less bright and looser in the lower end, which I like quite a bit. It's also a "quick" amp, very responsive to playing style and cleans up beautifully with slight volume knob and pick attack adjustments. The other funny thing I noticed was that this amp is noticeably quieter than my other Rocket. I also love that a set of 6AQ5's costs about 1/4 what a cheap set of EL84's cost and they're all GE/Sylvania/RCA brand NOS! But I had these on hand and so my actual build cost was all of $10 for a few sockets! For preamp tubes I'm using a mix of RCA and Sylvania to get a more "American" feel from this amp. The other thing you guys might notice about this build is that I did it backwards. This was not intentional but I was using my first Rocket build flipped upside down as a guide and forgot to compensate for this! All worked out fine in the end but I definitely did some headscratching at first trying to figure out what to do after I cut out the power transformer mount on the wrong side of the chassis..
Here's some pics for now:
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