Here is a very rudimentary drawing of the Plexi/800 amp idea with separate tone stacks. I drew it this way because it appeared aesthetically pleasing to me. The biggest concern I would have is avoiding cross talk. Does anyone have any opinions one way or another concerning whether they think this could be accomplished? I would also add the OD and FX circuits as well as the LarMar PPIMV.
That's a very ambitious amp there (was there a schematic besides Tubenits?) and to fit all of it into a 1.5" high chassis kicks it up another few difficulty notches. Why if it's not absolutely necessary is my first thought? Personally I don't go less than 2" for even the smallest amp's I've designed. As long as you make it plenty wide and long you "might" be okay but if it were me, I wouldn't do it at 1.5" & I'm also wondering about heat & ventilation? Another challenge with a small size chassis is that doesn't help deal with possible parasitic oscillation issues with too much too close together but it's all in the parts placement, circuit layout, & grounding scheme for an amp like this one. Actually for most any amp to be "successful". With so much money, time, and effort going into a project like this one I hope you have a good understanding overall? It's much different than copying or cloning an amp. On your hand-drawn layout I have a couple things that jumped out to me: Your negative "D" supply node seems to be going to a .1uF cap which goes to your Pre P1 Vol. This will short out your signal if it's what I'm seeing correctly and not the place for it. It also appears your HT center tap is drawn connecting to between your series reservoir caps (looking at the red/yellow wire)?! Ground this and your reservoir caps together keeping the wire as short as possible and away from anything sensitive using thick wire also locating it to a nearby tranny bolt? Large currents flow here. Mind your OT wiring due to high current flow also. It appears that you're placing your iron close together? Do you know about using a "listening" device trick to keep evil noise away? All your best efforts will be for naught if this is screwed up. It gets worse too when the amp is being pushed more & more, it's not just at idle conditions. It's assumed that you know about heater wiring since it's not shown? The things I'm mentioning are the usual suspects but then there are many "special techniques" and opportunities for things to go wrong. Too many to list generically. Good luck Mike.
Jojokeo
I have no idea why I wrote 1 - 1/2". I have had all my chassis made to a 2 - 3/8" or 2 - 1/2" depth. This chassis will be 8 - 1/2" wide and 25 - 1/2" long. The cabinet will be 30" wide to match the width of the speaker cabinet I will be using for it. The top of the cabinet will have the small Marshall grill for ventilation and the tubes will be facing up. I also had the PT made a little more beefy than is probably needed to reduce heat buildup.
Thank you for catching the D node mistake. I moved it to its proper place.
The HT center tap is wired the way it is because it is designed as a voltage doubler. This is consistent with the Marshall 1959 schematic. I had my transformer HT wound at 173 - 145 - 0 - 145 - 173 volts. Must have the voltage doubler in my circuit.
I have to admit that I am a little concerned that the overdrive channel may push the 800 over the edge but I won't know for sure until I try it. I am more concerned with the impact of stacking pots if I decide to add a second tone stack tube. I have never done that kind of wiring and I can see were I could get myself in trouble there.
Pretty confident in the transformer spacing. Will do the same thing I did on my two Overdrive Special builds. Shouldn't be a problem.
I don't know anything about the listening device trick but would sure like to. I have a feeling I will be pushing the envelope with this build and will need all the help I can get.
Thanks
Mike