I'm sure your schedule is rough with all the classwork so can understand that skipping the more mundane aspects of the build process is in your interest. A lot of guys sell just the chassis too so if you wanted to focus some shop time, you could still design and layout your turret boards in your graphics tool and do some minimal fabrication. Watts Tube Audio sells a very wide selection of replica turret boards. Very good materials and workmanship. You could get a chassis from vendor x, your boards from Ken at Watts, and maybe source all your "boo-teek" parts from some of the guitar amp part vendors. It is hard to get everything from one place (this is where kits fill the demand) but you can get exactly what you want; that for me is the big difference. It's like beer. You can get cheap sh*t anywhere and catch a cheap buzz, or you drink from the well.yoyohomieg5432 wrote:i see what you mean. i have very limited time now though so i can't spend as much time on this as i would like to.
what kit components do you think should be of best quality? which components does it not matter as much?
as i do build the amp i plan to understand what each component does/why certain values are chosen/etc so i can better understand how the amp works. i just dont have time to do all the chassis work, and other finer things like that now.
I think component materials and part choices do matter. Again, not trying to talk you out of a kit but just do your research. You can get some very good deals. Where you absolutely want to spend you money first is on quality transformers. Nobody cares what the chassis looks like, many guys gut old junker amps and repurpose the chassis. Transformers are what you are listening to in a way so avoid off-shore chinese steel. Stick with Heyboer, Edcor, Mercury, and Magnetic Components. From there, get some decent tubes. After that I would go with 1W or higher metal film resistors for your plate loads (anode resistor), carbon and/or metal film resistors in the signal path. If you need to have period-correct specifications then you might have to source some Allen Bradley carbon comps if your project calls for it.
Your choice of amp project will steer you towards what signal caps you might want to use. There are really no "rules" though save for those of electronics (right part rating for the job). You can spend days reading threads with guys arguing this cap over that but it's up to you. There's some easy you-can't-go-wrong solutions for picking caps (definitely look at the gut shots here and see what the guys use for what amp).