It's been a while. Always good to come see what's happening in EL34 World.
I've been asked to build a PP tube amp for a local guitarist. Lucky me. He wants a lot, including a foot-switched overdrive channel, and a "boost" channel of about 3-6dB so he can go from clean rhythm into clean solo mode without any overdrive characteristics.
I have no trouble with the OD because I've used a Marshall cold-clipper foot-switched channel in designs before. I used the Hoffman relay power rectifier from this website - great stuff.
My question concerns the boost. He wants this foot-switchable also.
He does not want a Master vol, so I thought maybe I could install two sizes of grid leak resistor right before the cathodyne phase inverter. This is usually a 1M in amps like the PR. I figured if I had the signal path connected to, say, a 750K grid leak, then with the footswitch it changed to the 1M grid leak, I'd get increased impedance for the signal and thus a boost effect. (750k is just a guess. I'll have to experiment to get what he wants, probably.)
Of course, the amp would be running at a slightly lower volume when the 750K res was engaged because it would allow more signal to bleed to ground, and that's a shame, but this seems like the simplest arrangement I can think of - just like two settings on a master vol pot, in a sense. But I'm probably missing something, like maybe it'll go "thunk" real loud when the footswitch is activated.
I'm wondering whether anyone here has tried this?
The next thought I had was that if this was possible, maybe I could pull the same trick with a long-tailed pair, although it would probably mean switching the two 1Megs to 750Ks simultaneously. Plus the LTP is much more nuanced and might not behave as predictably as a cathodyne PI. Might not be a happy arrangement.
Any thoughts/suggestions? Thanks as always.