>apparantly radio folks are NOT as "giving" as the guitar guys
Most of those guys remember the days when you got schematics by purchasing Sam's Books. They kinda still run with that. I don't like paying for PDF copies of other people's work. If I'm gonna pay, I want originals or I want to pay the designer. We here at Hoffman are much more of a Free Information Society than is the norm.
>If you want a clean amp with lots of headroom google up the schematics for the Motorola HS-544, HS-619 or HS-621.
Copying another circuit is not part of this exercise. This is a "start from scratch" routine, kinda like a crossword puzzle. I don't want to turn to the back page for the answers.
Here is how I designed this circuit:
I had a general idea of what my goal was so I needed to find a power transformer first. The one I have that has been scream at me to use for ages is a 700VCT @300mA with dual filaments @4A, 5V @ 2A, and 30V at 50mA. Smells a lot like a good candidate for 26L6GC's. I have a donor amp that can cough up the OT so I don't have to buy any big ticket items. Next I pulled the data sheet for 6L6GC and designed verbatim the 450V typical operating condition. It calls for -37V. Using a bridge on the the 30V tap will give me 41V at best so I opted for a voltage doubler. I set the current at 10mA so that the math is easy, 100 ohms = 1V. Next the data sheet says I need 70 volts of swing to make full power. I weighed a 12AU7 long tail vs. a concertina. I can make more output with a LTPI but I think I can make just enough with a concertina (100V). This left me 1/2 a 12AU7 bottle. I made a simple gain stage with an AV of about 11. It has an input threshold of about 10V. These 2 stages combined have a gain of about 10 vs the LTPI which had a gain of about 6 with roughly a 6V input threshold. The tone stack is basically 3 decade boxes and will change if I do go beyond bread-board. The idea here it to minimize my gain loss. Pots are cheap, but switching caps is better IMO. So now all I'm left with is a V1 stage. I can't stand to waste 1/2 a bottle and I'm not looking for OD so cascading stages is out. I decided to parallel V1. It looks like when you do this, you lose a lot of Hi frequency response. My V1 grid stopper is is 10X less than normal. Time will tell if this will sound OK or not. A single 12AX7 triode will make an AV of about 50. This parallel circuit makes a gain of about 70. I don't really need the extra gain for a clean amp where as V2 is only looking for 10V. With 1V of input, V1 can kick out close to 70V. I decided to keep on running. Next I totaled up my currents and desired voltages and plugged them into PSU designer. I crossed a few I's and dotted a few T's and here I am.