I've looked at the London Power site awhile back for power scaling. I wish they had a better web site designer. The power scaling promises quite a bit but a lot of amp companies use LP power scaling on their amps so there must be something to it. It does seem like things are not as straight forward as you might think they are with additional kits that need to be purchased other than the main one you're looking at, unless I'm mistaken.
I'd be willing to try it if I knew i could install the ps myself. It doesn't seem like a whole lot of money compared to an attenuator.
You are definitely right in that the cost of the kit is really low compared to let's say an ultimate attenuator that can cost upwards if $700 with the extra features.
I have to be honest but the worst thing I did was decide to get an UA. I ended up blowing a couple of OT on a reissue plexi amp . And no. Not becuase of negligence as I had followed to the T everything that was in the instructions. Also you're running the amp at full load and in fact because the volume is so low at cranked volumes you can Play for hours with the amp just screaming for mercy. Maybe that was it. I didn't know how to resell this thing and ended up selling it to my amp tech.
the SV1 is I believe on a whole different level. The output tubes actually run cooler. And other attenuators don't even come close to this in terms of tone. I can get a whole different pallet of tones as well as maintain the tone when dialing up the volume. I have heard you have to dial the ps and the power scale pot together to maintain the tone at higher volume. It works great like this. I am still experimenting with it.
Yes. You do need to get separate kits for this. Since my PT didn't have a separate dedicated bias winding I needed the raw bias supply kit as well.
This is so you will have sufficient voltage for your seaparate bias supply.
The bfx loop is separate so up to you if you want the fx loop. Although the fx loop I'd recommend highly as it sounds very transparent.
All in all for power scaling you'd need one of the power scaling kits depending on whether your amp is cathode or fixed bias and the the raw bias supply (rbx) kit.
Overall the cost altogether is really low. Considering what you are getting
Kevin is not a money hog as I've only known him to be passionate about this kind of stuff. Although it is installed in many different amp companies the cost is more than reasonable.
And it is really the BEST for playing your amp at low volumes. Better than the $300 to $800 attenuators which are not so ultimate but dangerous.
As for installing. It is actually not that simple. Unless you know your stuff. For someone like me it took some help to understand proper installation as well as biasing methods. So you have to know your amp and all the appropriate points in the amp to install this. Or you can get a licensed tech to install it. The more experienced builders will know how to install it easily I believe. But for me it was not that simple. It took me about a month to get it all working plus me gutting my original jcm800 completely and rebuilding from scratch
Plus all the additional mods like the extra gain stage, galactic grounding method, and split filtering. All discussed in the TUT books. I have two of them so far :) this amp project must have taken me a couple of months in total
The kits themselves took me about a month or a bit more to completr. . I had to figure out what to do before doing anything. Now that I am familiar with the installation Im not soo scared to add these to my other amp (s). Which I will be doing so shortly.
Another thing to note is you MUST follow correct biasing procedures which is also explained in TUT2. I ended up frying the sv1 once because I just swapped in a new pair of tubes without biasing properly. Stupid I know. If you don't know then you should ask Kevin or follow it to the T on the instructions provided with the kit.
Also I believe ay one point Kevin had a powerscaling kit which included both the raw bias supply and the sv1. But he realized some people probably already had the sufficient voltage supply probably from a separate winding. So hence he divides these up into separate circuits. He is right. Sv 1 is really super value if you ask me.