I just ordered a right angle Princeton reverb chassis for my next build, and I’m not overly happy with it. The preamp tube mounting holes are pretty close to the edge of the chassis and just considering my options for heater wiring. It’s too close to run them along the edge, not enough room, if I flew them, they would run very close to the switch, fuse and speaker jack. The only problem I could see is running them close to the speaker jack, yeah?
I’m wondering about series heaters like in SLO builds with bare wire running along each side. I think it LOOKS great but what are the reasons for not doing it? Is it something I could get away with in a *not so* high gain amp? I have seen a few threads about this kind of heater wiring, even with Marshall series wiring, some of those amps are super quiet. Should I give it a shot? It’s a lot of extra work if it’s no good so I would definitely like to know if it’s worth attempting or if I should just fly them and not worry about it.
My general plan is to build the Hoffman AC30 top boost preamp with a parallel input stage like matchless and CF tone stack. Parallel reverb driver and single triode recovery and a cathodyne phase inverter and push pull cathode bias 6V6’s and an 8k OT for the tweed deluxe flavor, maybe a high cut control. Working on a schematic now and should have enough room to do all of this in this chassis.