T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
989.1 | wishful thinking | MARKER::BUCKLEY | Take me down to the Paradise City | Tue Nov 22 1988 09:51 | 2 |
| The 6 stage preamp sounds cool! You gonna include a variac in there
as well?
|
989.2 | VARIAC? | ROLL::BEFUMO | I chase the winds of a prism ship | Tue Nov 22 1988 11:14 | 6 |
| Variac? where would that go and what would it do?
As for the 6-stage, I'm working from MESA MK-III schematics, so
tow of those stages kick in under footswitch control to form a
lead/overdrive configuration. Normally, it's just 4 stages.
joe
|
989.3 | | MIST::CARSTENSEN | | Wed Nov 23 1988 16:23 | 19 |
|
I've not worked with tubes before, but I think
a PC board would work, as long as you did it properly.
Like you said, keep high-voltage traces as isolated as possible.
I don't think the currents in the input stage will be very
high, so resistive heating and voltage losses should be low.
The traces to the output stage and power supplies should be as wide
and short as possible. You may want to use double sided 2 ounce
copper boards to reduce losses. If you can find 3 ounce boards,
use those. If, after construction, a specific trace or two seems
to have too much losses, you can connect the node with a
wire to supplement the trace.
Be sure to isolate the feedback and other sensitive traces
from the power traces. Good luck, this sounds like a fun project.
Frank Carstensen
|
989.4 | Boards burn | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | Ah, the road within without | Mon Nov 28 1988 11:13 | 6 |
|
I'd have to say keep the power tubes off the PC material - I've
seen lots of "burned boards" from the heat.
Joe Jas
|
989.5 | Too, too hot..... | MIST::CARSTENSEN | | Mon Nov 28 1988 15:46 | 6 |
|
Good point. Will the tube sockets provide enough thermal
insulation to keep the boards from discoloring or actually
burning?
Frank
|
989.6 | Tubes will remain just where they are | ROLL::BEFUMO | I chase the winds of a prism ship | Tue Nov 29 1988 16:04 | 4 |
| re [.4] - As a matter of fact, the board is going to replace a fender
bassman's guts, so all the tube sockets, as well as the transformers,
will remain. It'll just be a matter of popping out the bassman
board & connecting my new one to the outboard components.
|