Well, I'm glad it wasn't me who bumped this thread into existence again. Not that I don't like the thread, I do, but oh well get ready for prices to skyrocket again.
Now that the cat is out of the bag again, here is what I have to add.
I have built it too and I have these observations.........
PRR speculated that it could be built using only 3 tubes. Eliminating the final stage (which functions as an output boost) and reconfiguring it as an input boost. He couldn't have been more right. Eliminating the last stage, from my tests, had no noticeable effect. Reconfigure........ I left it as is and ran the input signal straight into it as is. The output then became my clean signal and it worked perfectly both as a guitar input and running with an effects loop.
On mine, there was some disparity between the extremes of the mixer pot because there is some loss thru the circuit. I found that this was easily compensated for by using a 25/25 bypass cap on the first (original) stage. I thought at first that it might cause problems because the cathode had series resistors tapped in the middle for some grid feedback and one of the SR leads attached there, but no, the only effect was a positive one.
The cap that Sluckey uses as a slowness boost for the LFO is interesting. I changed mine to .1uF. The frequencies still overlap, but I get some really slow oscillations with .1 and I thought why not have the range be as wide as possible.
Next, I did a lot of tweaking and fiddling, and the biggest thing that stood out to me was that this thing (with certain tweaks) makes a very convincing wah effect, but it oscillates by means of the LFO circuit. It would be very interesting if someone could come up with a dynamically responsive LFO circuit, we could have this thing double as an autowah. Just a thought.
Enjoy.
Dave