I am truely envious of the woodworking skills that you fellows have. I have no such skills. I can work metal, but I can't cut a straight line on a piece of wood. So, I look for projects that already have the wood intact. This is one that I did a while back:


It was not my first scratch-built, but it was my first push-pull that I 'borrowed' ideas from Gibson, Fender, and a couple other old amps. The guys here coached me on the rough spots. Everything turned out really well, so as my wife says about all men (we are actually all boys), I "conquered it and put it in the pile with the other toys". Then on to more, that have need to be conquered.
I do have two more similar (minus speaker cabs), that are the same model of Setchell-Carlson. One is very complete, with a nice cabinet. I have never powered it up, as I don't have a schematic and did not want to do so, until I knew more about it. Good fortune led me to another of the same model, minus the cab, and highly hacked. It had a diagram of the OT, rolled up in the chassis amongst the components. So now, I have the impedance of each OT tap that I can use to connect a speaker cab to the good amp. I suppose that I could have pulled the power tubes and brought it up on the limiter.
Anyway, I plan to use the hacked one for some type of effects build. The Dorf Vibrato is one thought, as it only has five tubes. Or, maybe a Tremolo and/or Reverb. Is there such a thing as a tube version of an octave doubler/shifter? If that is the proper name for it.
I thought to put it on a wooden platform with the same for end caps. It would clean up nice. It still has the original iron that I can use.
Jack