I recently picked up an old early fifties Olson RA-165 hi fi amp, in pitiful shape, and thought it had the basics to make a decent sounding guitar amp. It was built with a 6SC7 preamp, a 6SL7 preamp/phase inverter and two 6V6's in PP, with a 5Y3. I thought, "heck this is practically early Fender here!"
After replacing the filter caps, I ripped all of the old crystal phono cartridge and tuner input resistors and capacitors out, and "Fenderized" it with a 68K input resistor and a 1meg first stage grid bias resistor, added a preamp gain pot between the 6SC7 stages, changed out the plate resistors to something more appropriate and swapped out the coupling caps to .022 uF. I also changed the 6V6 cathode resistor to a 250 ohm 5 watt, and dropped the bypass cap from 125 uF to 50uF. I added a set of Sovtec tubes from AES. I ended up with a pretty cool sounding amp. The volt amp rating of the PT is a little light to go full blown 14 watts plate dissipation, so I settled for 11 watts, with a plate current of 36 ma. The output transformer is very beefy as was the norm on amps like this back then.
I measured the power output at 10 watts even.
Hey, for something I got for practically nothing except for the tubes I replaced, and the small amount spent on resistors and caps, it's pretty awesome! Now I wish my woodworking skills were there to make a cabinet for it. Presently I'm running it through a Weber 10" single speaker extension cabinet, with a Jensen Special Design 40w speaker that sounds great!
It's fun to do stuff like this, resurrecting something that some people would throw out and turning it into something useful! Put a mic in front of that 10" Jensen, and your gigging!
Pete