So I finally built a D'Mars ODS. Been wanting to do one since I first found this site. I used the "5879 & FX" schematic found in post #2 here...
http://el34world.com/Forum/index.php?topic=17305.0I really really like the sound of this amp. It really matches with my playing style very well, which is an electric blues/funk sound (greatly influenced by Robben Ford, Freddie King, and others like that) and my PRS SingleCut with their #7 PAF-style pickups. I initially tested it with a Vintage 30 in a closed-back cabinet and it was pretty bright and shrill. Then I tried my WGS ET65 (their version of a Celestion Heritage 65) in an open-back cab and that speaker is a MUCH better match for the amp. Tames the highs a bit and has a nice big, open bottom. The open-back pine cabinet has a really nice "3D big" sound that really fills the room nicely.
I deviated from the design in three ways:
1) I made my own layout so I could use my preferred grounding scheme. The only reason I did this is because I am used to this style so it makes building and debugging easier for me. Plus, making my own layouts really helps me wrap my brain around how the circuit works.
2) I ended up bypassing the effects loop altogether because I didn't like how it dramatically colored the tone and distortion level in the amp, especially in Clean mode. I actually left the "FX Level" control there but added a 100k resistor in series between the control and the PI input, which in reality is really nothing but a pre-PI master volume control.
3) I used solid-state rectification. I started out going with the valve rectifier but I think my rectifier tube was bad from the get-go. I checked all my wiring and was correct but since I blew the rectifier pretty much straight-away on a Friday evening, I didn't want to get derailed waiting for a new one so I just wired in some diodes for a solid state full-wave
rectifier.
The amp fired-up nicely first try (except for the rectifier incident of course). What a good feeling - there was a LOT of time spent on this amp! This was also my first "channel switching" build and with three relays I was worried about all that, but it went smoothly once I figured out I had to reverse the polarity on my LEDs in the footswitch. There is a helpful thread about that here somewhere. I think there is a link to it on the D'Mars schematic page.
Only one issue I need to track down... when the PPIMV is turned up past seven or so, I get a really loud low-frequency oscillation/feedback that I need to track down but the volume level at that point is already borderline too loud for most situations I will ever be in - still plenty loud enough for small to medium-sized venues but I need to track it down and fix it anyways.
My hat is off to Tubenit for this design. It really does deliver! Many thanks to him for both freely sharing his design and for his help in the correspondence I have had with him over the last year or so leading up to this build!
Hoping to have a full build-report with pics and sound samples on my blog soon.