Monday, November 16, 2020

“Succinct II” - integrated 180W Class D amp with tube preamp

 









The original Succinct was built on commission and again it was a 180W Class D amp. The owner lost all in our latest bushfires. By accident I found this out and offered to replace the amp for cost of parts only. We added a tube preamp to make this a true integrated. 

It is all housed in a light weight 2U charcoal 19” rack mount. There are two inputs selected by a small front switch. The onboard PS with the hifimediy T4 module is used here and a Radi0kit 12V/250V PS is used to power the tube section. The tube is a Raytheon 12AU7 and the preamp is built on a small piece of Vera-brd. The tranni is 300VAC and connects direct to the amp module. The amp module has speaker crowbar protection. Twenty second delay on and immediate off. 

The sound, as usual from these T4 modules, is pristine, very detailed and with excellent bass drive down to 30hZ the limit of my speakers. For way under $AU1K this amp has a stack of power (180W into 8ohms) and crystal clear with only a touch of tube warmth. 



 


Friday, October 30, 2020

180W Class D power amp

 











Yet another Class D compact 180W amp using the onboard PS. This means you only have to add a Tranni of the appropriate voltage and wattage to complete the amp. The enclosure is solid and in attractive two tone. It is fused and earthed. This one was built on commission. I‘m happy with the finish and sound. Extremely detail and excellent bass control.  

Sunday, October 4, 2020

“Illusion” - 6SN7 SRPP preamp in a plastic jiffy box

 

















Mostly from parts on hand in da lab this simple 6SN7 SRPP preamp was constructed. Having a universal PS makes making many preamps very inexpensive. Of course when it comes to sales the preamp and PS go and therefore I have to make another PS. Constructed in a large plastic jiffy or projects box this great looking preamp ("Illusion") was primed and top coated with copper hamertone epoxy enamel spray paint. A tough and cool looking finish.

The tubes are Ozzy Miniwatt 6SN7 GTAs. On the tube tester both tubes test "88" well into the good zone and closely matched. Under the bonnet is a turret brd. I have a bag of these and it is time to use them up. They come with heavy ceramic sockets and flashy gold plated hold downs. Illusion has two selectable inputs and one output and Al foil lines the inside and bottom of the preamp. 

A switch at the front selects between inputs. A standard pot is on the output so all of the input signal is amplified before volume level is set. Russian military PIO caps are on the output and there is no input caps. Never a problem. Input impedance is 300K. There is a mix of multi-stand and solid core copper wire and WBT silver solder used throughout. Metal film resistors are used.

The sound is solid, grounded and feels relaxed and natural with good drive and bass. It gives me great satisfaction to use primarily parts on hand (vintage tubes been in da lab for well over twenty years). To now have those inexpensive parts in a working great looking and excellent sounding preamp and so cheap to build, is gratifying.  An enjoyable building and listening experience.   

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

"retro-K465" portable headphone amp



 








Oatley released a headphone amp kit based on the OPA2134 - K465. A CMoy style simple HP amp based on the OPA2134. Oatley guarantees genuine OPA2134s and I have validated that. I received an early release which was assembled with pot and sockets on board. These were removed and the good input caps replaced with Russian PIO caps. 


A larger ABS enclosure was used than the last two HP amps to accommodate the cct. brd and two 9V lithium batteries. The batteries are converted to differential supply on board - +/- 9V. The enclosure is lined with Al foil top and bottom and is earthed. 


Once more my "safe on" wiring using the changeover switch on the input socket ensures the amp cannot accidentally be left on and drain batteries. The sound is good with excellent clarity, good volume and drive. The kit should be simple to assemble. The kit is complete with 9V battery clips and the ability to also use AA battery holders. You can see I am now spoiled for choice with three HP amps, one with the PT2308 chip and the others with OPA2134 chip.

Sunday, July 26, 2020

Salt Cellar II - 6EM7 triode mono amplifier





Building yet another mono triode Salt Cellar wine box amp I had to make it different. To make even simpler this time just one tube, the 6EM7, which has two triodes in the one bottle. I'm told its like having a 6SL7 and a 45 in the one tube. Once more an external (but different) tranni box was used. This one also works with my two wine box 6L6 SE UL amps.

Again all parts came from da lab. That part of the Salt Cellar initiative was flowed strictly. How simple with just one tube and an Alps stereo attenuator. The output of the attenuator is coupled with two resistors for a mono mix. Strictly using parts on-hand I use a SS double Pi rectifier brd. I had made many years ago. Add a big 10H 125mA choke and yet another stage of filtering you have a dead quiet "is it on" quietness. 

A different finish here from using a staining varnish and again an old world look and feel. The knob goes on top otherwise it would have looked a little baron. All wiring is via solid core Cat 5, motsly as twisted pairs. Early days the amp sounds good but does it compare with the original SC 807 amp. Time will tell.

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Salt Cellar - mono 807 triode strapped integrated amp










You should read the Salt Cellar article from Stereophile online to get a better understanding of why I took on this project. In the article a mono system was hobbled together using low power tube mono amps and high efficiency horns. The system was auditioned in an old salt mine which would add to the acoustic. 

After building a few small tube preamp from parts on hand I decided to build a mono triode integrated amp from parts I had in da lab. Because the amp in the article had tube rectification and the power tube had a top cap plus the amp was held on a wooden frame I went with similar. I've built a few wine box amps and had a few spare boxes on hand. A stain I have used once before was re-used here but instead of multiple coats of hand panted lacquer I went with a spray lacquer. The finish was much more rustic and had the appearance of aged wood.

The power tube is an 807 a pair of which I was given many years ago. On hand was two old RCA 6SN7 tubes and two "80" small rec. tubes. I had to purchase a few high voltage filter caps and a big ass 720V power tranni. The power tranni sits outside on its own matching brd with a multi-pin connection. The tranni was mounted on thick rubber grommets to control vibration and light rubber feet are also fitted. For a bit of tranni bling chromed domed nuts bind down on brass washers. A shared tranni means any other tube amps I build can share the one expensive tranni. Bonus!

The smothing network, in the box, is a doubled Pi. C-L-C-R-C;- 47uf Mundorf MLytic ploy, 10H 125mA choke, 100uf, 1.5K 5W, 200uf. All this fits snuggly into the box. The amp with 98db speakers is absolutely dead quiet, like "not on" dead quiet. 300V is applied to the Edcor 15W OPT and 250V to the 6SN7. The 6SN7 is both preamp and driver tube. Half for the preamp and half for the driver. The whole PS is well snubbed with 0.1uf polies. There is a mix of metal film and carbon film resistors plus 5W wire wounds.

The volume pot sits between the preamp and driver tube not upfront as many do. This means Im not throwing away signal then amplifying what is left. The whole input signal is amplified in the preamp stage then attenuated into the driver stage. There is no input cap and a  0.68 poly connects the preamp to the driver stage and a 0.1uf PIO to the 807 power tube. The preamp section and 807 have no Ck but the driver tube does - a low ESR elctro which is also snubbed.

Beware if you view the original schematic on Diyaudioprojects site pins "2" and "3" are incorrectly labled so check it out yourself.  After solving many small issues including the pin swap and in my case bad pin counting the amp function perfectly with voltages and currents near textbook values.

In my Salt Cellar system you will see a mix of 12" Beyma and Altec 511B/FaitalPro horns. The Beyma provides bass and super tweeter and the horns mid/treble. I'm using the Beyma Xover which Xs at 1100hZ and is expecting 16 ohms on the treble side. Two horns in series gives me that value. Two runs of solid core Cat 5 with mates and pairs split provide the speaker wire.

I tried the speaker setup with two horns but later felt a single horn on the Beyma on the floor the more balanced configuration. The horn is tilted up slightly and padded down a few db. Still lots of mid but the bass is felt more. I watched a 4K movie with this configuration and really enjoyed it. Missed nothing and gained a lot more. Who needs stereo?

The sound is light on bass but heavy on detail, immediacy and transients are ridiculous. So much more revealed in tracks I know very well. Part of the SC system is to hobble one together from parts on hand. I achieved that about 90%. I have enough parts for a second amp.

Stereo is mixed down to mono in the amp with a "Y" network of three 47K resistors. The amps produces about 5W and plays plenty loud through the high efficiency speakers (98db). I haven't tried how loud yet as at about half vol. it is already deafening with no distortion.


Friday, June 19, 2020

“Rosso” - E88CC SRPP Preamp





After building an excellent sounding preamp ("Continuum") based on the same Gold Lion E88CC gold pin tubes I thought I would build another. Main reason is I have another pair of perfectly matched tubes. Too make this a visually standout preamp I painted this one red and thus the name "Rosso". 

As with Continuum it has two selectable inputs. Rosso has an Alps pot and 4oz solid brass gold plated knob. Similar componentry under the bonnet. Russian PIO output caps but this time snubbed with a 0.1uf poly. Metal film resistors and silver plated wire-warp wire as hookup. My universal external PS just plugs straight into this one also via an XLR socket.

Where this one does vary from Continuum is it has been redesigned. Bruce Heran of American oddwatt fame, who provided the original design, re-tweaked the whole preamp. Much lower HT and lower value resistors. I'm sure this one sounds even better than Continuum which sold. It must be the redesign as so much of Rosso is similar to Continuum.

Treble has lifted here and transparency has taken a big step forward. Gian is high in both preamps because the original design was for a lower gain tube. In operation I have found this not to be a problem, just bloody great sounding. Combined with my DIY 300W SS power amp these two are truly a matched made in sonic heaven.