so after building a Vox AC30, a Fender Princeton Reverb and a Fender 5E3, I really want to start building a Super Reverb.
But it won't be a standard Super Reverb, instead I'd like it to be stereo.
What I mean is having two separate audio amps in the same chassis/cabinet, each one driving a pair of 10" speakers (as you know the Super Reverb is 4x10").
Reason for this is that I'd like to use stereo effects (particularly chorus) and mimic what the Roland JC120 does (dry signal on one speaker, wet signal on the other speaker).
I will remove the normal channel and tremolo circuitry, but keep the reverb.
Then I will need to duplicate the whole audio path (except reverb), and add a second output transformer.
I guess I can keep a single power transformer, provided that I add an additional 2A or 3A filament transformer to supply the new tubes.
Also, a single GZ34 won't supply enough current for 4x 6L6. Two GZ34 in parallel is asking for troubles (if I'm not wrong), so I'd say I need to use a WZ68 Copper Cap (Equivalent of 2x GZ34, 450mA).
Would those mods be enough to keep the single 125P5D transformer? or maybe I just need a Twin Reverb transformer.
I will use dual gang potentiometers to control both circuits at the same time. Initially I thought about using a single preamp, and adding a (mono)send/(stereo)return after the preamp, but I guess it would be easier with dual potentiometers.
I will make it switchable so that I'm not forced to feed a stereo signal to use all of 4 speakers.
what do you think? can this be done?
I have some questions:
1) how the output power of the amp will be affected using a pair of power amp driving 2 speakers each, instead of a single power amp driving 4 speakers, keeping the same output impedance?
2) what should I do with the reverb? I guess the simplest way would be to keep the reverb on one channel only, remove the existing mix potentiometer (wired as attenuator) and use a dual potentiometer wired as crossfader to get 100% wet on that channel