I have been working on a test bed for the 12DW7 transformerless reverb circuit provided by 2Deaf in
another threadA schematic is attached. It is based on the familiar
Hoffman Princeton Reverb no tremolo amp circuit available here on el34world. I cut and pasted 2Deaf's driver in place of the Fender transformer type driver. The recovery circuit is the standard Fender. 2Deaf's driver needs a 350 volt B+ so I modified the power supply to provide a 350 volt node, and separate nodes for the other preamp tubes. I also added a middle control, changed the power amp to cathode bias, and added the LarMar PPIMV.
I had an idea of how to do a bread board in an existing gutted amp chassis I had. It is the bastard love child of a turret board and a terminal strip--plastic with 6-32 tapped holes for the connection points. It turned out to be pretty fussy and cumbersome to work with, and I have to be vey careful to assure there are no unintended connections of component leads. And it is just plain hideous as you can see in the pictures.
On the good side, it made it easy to disconnect the reverb circuit and test the basic amp circuit first.
No fuses blew, and the light bulb limiter test went OK. But being in the category of "knows just enough to be dangerous" I went down the rabbit hole of checking voltages while the amp was still plugged into the limiter. Several hours spent chasing low heater and B+ voltages before the, uh, light bulb went on (rim shot please) that there is a reason they call it a "limiter."
When I turned it on without the limiter, no fuses blew, but it didn't make any sound either.
Suspect # 1 was the kludged up nature of the construction. Every component was checked and rechecked, traced against the schematic, tubes verified to work in other amps, speaker verified, connections, cleaned, cathode resistor changed. Hours and hours.
I started consulted the Fender AA1164 schematic and found some of my voltages were high. Power supply was revised accordingly
I finally started to make some progress when for some reason I tried to take a voltage reading on the grid of V3a. Not a check you would normally do. But the amp began making sound. For a few seconds of playing. Then it fritzed out again.
I thought it must be a tube socket / pin 2 issue......another rabbit hole.
Eventually I realized it was not a mechanical contact issue, but something else related to the grid of V3a. I found I could repeatably get the amp to play for a few seconds by touching the V3a grid with the voltmeter probe (other probe grounded). Then I found if I turned the volume waaaay down, I could play for extended periods, but it would fritz out as soon as I turned up the volume more.
With no guitar plugged in, turning the volume up caused squealing feedback type noises. Which made me wonder if the feedback circuit / output transformer primaries were hooked up wrong. Fortunately, those connections were kind of hard to get to, so I did not go down that rabbit hole....
What I finally figured out after reading Merlin's preamp book was that when I disconnected the reverb, the grid of V3a was no longer referenced to ground. The breadboard made it easy to patch in a 1 meg resistor, and the world suddenly became a better place. This thing sounds GOOD. How close to a real Princeton? I don't know, the closest I ever had was a silver face Deluxe Reverb, and it has been 6 or 7 years since I sold it. But this build does have a certain richness and fullness to it.
Stay tuned, I will report soon on the transformerless reverb circuit.