Ground test point is the bolts on the chassis or the chassis itself, it's anodized aluminum. They work just fine.
If you already have 3 tip jacks, why not spring for the 4th and have the scheme make sense?
It's my own layout ... keep things as neat as possible. ... There's about an inch from the 82K resistor to the 820K ones.
Remember the hum issues in your other build?
So this won't cause hum, but here's a simple "lead dress rule":
- Keep outputs away from inputs.
- Keep high level signal wiring away from high impedance circuit points (because the high-level wiring induces a signal in the high-impedance wiring).
Consider alternate ways to do what you're trying to do. When I built my
25L15, I used effectively a single row of turrets on either side of the row of tube sockets, wires runnign from turte to socket pin, and parts spanning the gap between turret rows over top of sockets. This put everything in a compact package, but still allowed for good lead dress, and such tricks as placing the heater wiring 90-degrees to all signal wiring (even 90 degrees to socket pins, if you look closely).
To give a sense of scale, it's only 4 inches from the top panel to the bottom panel in that preamp chassis; even less if you deduct the size of the lip on the chassis edge. Yet there's still plenty of room for the entire preamp and phase inverter (and power supply parts, but that's beside the point).
I know we tend to stick to the 3-1/8" model for a turret board, but sometimes it makes sense to do things differently if you don't also copy Hoffman's layout approach.