I'm here because I greatly value the knowledge and opinions of other amp aficionados. I'm more of a Marshall guy and this is my first Fender.
I have no problem with schematics this layout is designed primarily off the original hand drawn Fender schematic. I purchased the Hoffman 17" turret board and I adapted the Fender schematic to that board. It's almost exactly the same.
Maybe I'm just lazy but currently I'm working in this layout from schematic and I don't want to add a step. The layout will be my guide to building the amp so I'll do that first. If everything goes well after the amp is finished I'll use my documented layout and any changes to create a proper schematic that matches the end result.
I have a product I created in Kicad from a schematic I drew and manufactured a bunch of PCBs. It's a tube buffered effects loop driver board that's 2.5"x1.4" and sounds fabulous. I have three versions. Go here to check it out:
https://reverb.com/item/93463581-tube-tone-tube-buffered-effects-loopI'm currently working on a modified version of the SLO-100 PCB that has my effects loop and some corrections to the location of the master volume and the cathode follower. Rather than have to mod the amp I want a proper PCB that can be soldered from top and bottom. This is a unique product I hope to finish soon.
I'm very good with schematics. To me it doesn't matter layout or schematic I see the same thing because it is the same just a logical drawing or physical layout of components and connections. I don't consider myself any kind of expert I'm a hack. I learn as I go. I have a computer science degree so I'm certainly not dumb. I'm learning electrical engineering with the help of AI. Amazing tool.
These amps are super simple when it comes to electronics complexity. It takes a few minutes of looking at the schematic and you immediately see what's going on. There is a lot of complexity in the science of vacuum tubes and electronics engineering in general but tube amps fall on the easy side of that spectrum IMO. It's a set of very specific tried and true methods that we all stick to because we know we can predict the results without an EE degree and knowing all the math and theory.
I would consider myself an artist at this point and this amp is primarily an art project and not simply an electrical appliance or another job for another rando customer. More effort and attention will go into lead dressing, component selection, layout design and actual wiring than goes into the circuit design. I'm copying what Fender and others have done but sort of fitting it together like legos.
At the end of the day it's all about all the contributions all of the amp guys have made to these amps over the last 60+ years. The cumulative knowledge has come together and we all have access to all of the greatest amp circuits and designs ever. I didn't design the effects loop circuit I'm just using what's out there that others have created along the way like all the great amp builders of today do.
I'm just looking for more clues and hints on how things work and how things might be done differently or better. Just looking for a sign.
I'm sticking to Fender component values and schematics for the entirety of the amp except for the added triode on the normal channel, the active summing cathode follower, and the tube buffered effects loop.
Most of all I want the amp to sound amazing.
What I'm doing here is quite unique and I just wanted to share it with anyone interested and get their opinions and input.
I appreciate all comments.
this amp was dropped off a truck and the chassis was bent pretty badly
That's the story of the famous Jimmy Page Supro and also a SRV amp.
Too bad a famous player didn't own it - be worth a fortune as is. Anyways, not trying to be offensive, but it's amazing how many people who are "learning" come here for advice and then refuse to consider any of the recommendations. Doing something unique is commendable, but doing it while ignoring the learned experience of others is kind of foolish. I also had a hard time reading schematics at first. But smart people, like the ones here, got me through it. It changes everything. Argue if you want, but schematics are the road maps to the electrical circuits. If you learn to use PC Express (easy to learn) you can find a schematic with the building blocks for that amp as a starting point and mod it like you stole it.
BTW, I have one of those amps. After replacing the filter and bypass caps I loaned it to a keyboard player. He will never give it back. It is a mean machine. Good luck.