So I have a few spares laying around and was given a fbar VOX DA10 as platform to build on trashed the digital stuff ready to make something small and nice:
The Credit on the attached circuit goes to "Doug Circuits" who seems to be a authority on Magnatone vintage amps
http://www.dougcircuits.com, unfortunately he does not answer emails So I thought I would turn to the fundies of the forum.
Please have a gander at the schematic and read some of the tech notes as provided by Doug. Specifically on the Tone control and Vibrato circuit and provide your valuable input
Build Notes:Details of the AC4 V3 EF86 essentialsFirst, I studied
Valve Wizard Merlin Blencowe's EF86 analysis. I think this was the key to the ulimate success of the amp. What Blencowe points out is that the original Vox EF86 design is not optimal for a guitar amp. Vox engineers simply lifted the EF86 circuit from the manufacturer's design book which was probably more suited to phonograph and microphone amplification than guitar amps. For my circuit, I followed Blencowe's advice for designing the EF86 for guitar. In this configuration, the EF86 is more stable, noise-free, and has no microphonic issues. The trade off for all this is less gain, however, with a 12AX7 gain stage to follow it, maximum gain was not required.
VibratoI wanted to add vibrato back to the circuit, but didn't have the real estate inside the amp for a dedicated 12AX7 plus all the caps and resistors. I had recently been breadboarding an old fashioned oscillator design called the Relaxation Oscillator. This design uses a neon bulb to produce a sawtooth shaped oscillation signal. Read more about that
here.Tone KnobWith both sections of a 12AX7 free for the gain circuit, I designed a tone circuit that might look complex, but it is really rather simple: Both triodes are fed the same signal from the EF86. Each triode has its own tone RC circuit to follow, one focused on bass tone, and the other focused on treble tone. After the two RC circuits, both are mixed together via the mix pot (the tone knob).
EL84 and Power SupplyThe EL84 stage is pretty much the same as the original AC4, except a 1KΩ screen resistor was added to lower the screen voltage to be 285V instead of 289V (plate is 283V). The original AC4 output transformer spec'ed a 5KΩprimary, and the TF103-48UL transformer I used is 8KΩ. This is close enough for an SE EL84 amp (close enough for me..).
The power supply needed some beefing. With the extra preamp stages, I wanted to add dedicated filter caps for each stage, and isolate them from the screen supply. I choose 8uf/350V caps for this. After I built the circuit, I found that the EZ80 simply could not keep up with the increased current demand. Since a rectifier tube doesn't introduce much tone-color in an SE amp, I sub'ed in some 1N4007 diodes to take care of this.
Line-Out I don't think I'll ever build another amp without a post-OT
line-out. It is so simple and really opens up the useability of a small 5W amp. The output can safely be plugged into another amp, a house PA, or a recording console. For this one, I chose a voltage divider with R2=150Ω, and R1 set to 4.7KΩ or 3.3KΩ depending on wheather the 8Ω or 4Ωoutput selector is switched.