there were two - i deleted the picture that was blurry on the input circuits. link below is the best shot of the schematic.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/9jxsy5eek10jyed/20151007_190258.jpg?dl=0
Thanks Pete!
I was trying to read the darned thing on an iPad. Big computer screen works much mo' better! I was thrown off by the tube chart being in reverse of how the tubes appear on the schematic - DOAH!
THIS appears to be the correct schematic, no?Couple of minor differences I saw:
He shows a 100uf bypass cap on the second 12AX7 cathode where yours has none.
Cathode bypass cap on 6U10 reverb recovery stage .5uf in yours, .1uf in Piazza's, plus he shows a 390pf treble bleeder from plate to cathode your amp doesn't have.
Tremolo wobbler cathode resistor 4.7K in yours vs. 3.3K
The network around what I ass-u-me is an optocoupler for the tremolo looks slightly different.
20uf vs. 25uf cathode bypass cap for power tubes shouldn't make any difference.
I like the cyclops P.L. smilie symbol by the way (pilot light).
I really appreciate you sharing the clearer schematic. Had no idea how much variation there was in "Reverb Rocket" circuits! Holy smokes, there's an R-12-R version in the library with 6V6 power tubes, bias vary tremolo, and a paraphase inverter (instead of the cathodyne seen in most of these including yours).
Speaking of tremolo, I'd never seen it inserted right after the first triode and before the oddest TMB tone stack ever.
Then again, Fender "Deluxe" covers a heck of a lot of ground from the Deluxe model 26 to the "Deluxe 90" (wish I'd never seen that dog's breakfast of a schematic).
It actually was the phase inverter I was most interested in until I realized that a 7199 is just a wee bit different from a 12A_7. Apparently Ampeg used DC coupled cathodynes, AC coupled with DC bias, and paraphase, all in different Reverb Rocket amps.
The transformer-less reverb also intrigues me. From various YouTube clips, it sounds pretty darn lush on some of these amps.
Thanks again,
Chip