You really did something here SG in thinking outside and inside the box which I really appreciate and applaud, not that you need my approval or anything.
And I really appreciate your praise my friend....there's no way that I'd be this far along without your initial help and direction, and I truly
THANK YOU for all of your help and support
on and off the forum. Thanks for taking the time out of your life to share this gift with me.....priceless!
So one of my big questions is does this have any semblance to your holy grail Bogner Ecstacy pre in it? Inquiring minds wanna know. I also didn't see but one potential voltage divider aside from the pots of course so wondering if you've tried the split plate load resistor technique or not?
Yes and yes...Bogner is in there and I did try the split plate load stuff, but it's not in this design...
The schematic is coming just as soon as I can get it cleared up and looking like something I would want to look at.
It took 2 months of on and off tweaking, with the help of a couple of local players to get this to where it is, so the schematic had to be reverse engineered from the resulting breadboard layout......
And it was noisier than a room full of soccer moms when it was on the breadboard,,,so I was a little scared about trying to jam it in this box....
So that's when I got the big idea to separate the boards, and try to separate the preamp tube current from the signal....and just give myself more room to work.....that's where some of my "innovation" bit me in the ass, because I spent more time trying to not make a mistake, while not following any other template.
But we got here, and now it's just finishing touches...
There are a few small problems to overcome, but it's got the monster tone, and it is gonna fly.
This is as far as I could imagine anyone would ever need to push gain, and I'm still shocked that what comes out of the speakers doesn't mush up or get "blocked"
The clean channel is based on the 5E3, but also shares the 'tubenit style' active effects loop which adds some gain... so it's hard to call it clean at all....but that's ok, because 'she' doesn't care...it would actually qualify as high gain for most guys that consider a half-cranked T-wreck as high gain....
I did LED cathode bias on the one triode that is dedicated to the clean channel, and that LED is mounted near the input and also acts as a standby power indicator....when you take the amp out of standby, the 1.7v drop across that LED causes it to light and that's how she'll know it's time to ROCK!
(thanks to sluckey, Merlin, tubenit, HBP, etc., etc.,)
This project started because I took the Sovtek/Bogner head into a local store and a couple of the guys were raving about it....
But this girl kinda stood back, and said it wasn't her thing.....too bright, not enough gain

, not enough d'jent (look it up, it's an actual word)
And I asked her to show me what she meant, and she plugged into a Marshall JVM series and proceeded to rip my face off....and my BIG MOUTH opened,,,and I said "Yeah, I can do that"

So I researched the 'Greatest Metal Amps' and "borrowed" every single schematic I could find and stared at them for about a week...and thought to myself "You could do that".....and that's when the breadboard came in very handy

The high gain channel is a culmination of everything I have "learned"

It is VERY bass heavy, and shares a modern NFB 'contour' control that compresses everything and tightens it up to the point of feeling like a completely different amp at one end of the dial to the other.
If you've ever wanted to push the outer limits of the highest of high gain, with no pedals in front.....this might be it.

It would be very easy to bring some highs back in if it turns out to be too dark.
Also, it appears SG & Ritchie are playing nice aside from corncobs?
Yup,,, Ed, sluckey and Willabe vouched for him so
now he's OK
