Finally done!
Here is a brief history of this project. I am a Vox nut. I think the JMI era Vox amps were some of the best sounding guitar amplifiers ever made. I have one of those rare 64 AC30s with candy red control panel and built-in top boost. Not only does it sound great, but that control panel looks cool as hell. A short while after I aquired that amplifier and the Vox bug bit, I found this rare 65 AC10 head/2x10 cab combo at a vintage shop that was closing. It was a little ragged and didn't sound right but aside from some changed components, was all original and was offered very cheap. Here is a picture of the two back then:
After I got it home and had time to go through it, I found a lot wrong. The reverb pan was broken and used old phono cartridges that haven't been made in years as the transducers. (It turns out that Tom Jennings had a hard-on for Hammond since he thought they were trying to rob him on reverb tanks so he had Dick Denney and the boys come up with their own reverb.) I also found that the tube rectifier had been replaced by a few diodes and then learned that this was the only AC10 that was produced without the awesome EF86 front end.
I decided to try and restore it anyway and sent it off to one of the best-known Vox techs in the US. Almost 3 months later, the amp returned but produced more smoke than sound. I had a long discussion with the tech and he then apologized and refunded my money telling me that he tried his best with the amp. That was several years ago and the amp sat in pieces as I tinkered with it in my spare time.
I finally decided that the only way the amp was ever going to work was if I replaced the guts and started from scratch so, a kit became the logical choice. I looked EVERYWHERE for a kit that had the following pre-requisites:
1) It had to have an EF86 front end
2) It had to fit in the existing amp
3) It had to sound great
After I heard the clips of the TC15, I knew that was the amp I wanted but would it fit? I emailed Stephen a few times about how I could make his circuit board fit in my existing chassis and retain the same look as the original amp. After reviewing all of the work and modifications that would be required to do this, I did not have the heart to hack up a vintage amplifier chassis with a modified circuit. Fortunately, the specs for the TC15 chassis just so happen to barely fit in the old Vox head shell and so I had a plan to insert a TC15 chassis into the old Vox head shell.
Of course, there were a couple challenges:
1) The TC15 chassis is a tube up design. The Vox is tube down. This would require careful wiring to make the transition and some new control plates. Thanks to Jeanne at BNP lasers, she had an aluminum material that was close enough to the JMI candy red panels that I liked and she was able to take my drawings and make me new front and back control panels.
2) The TC15 chassis BARELY and I mean BARELY fit into the head shell with no cutting of the shell required. I did have to modify the chassis to match the shell face angle and I had to drill new holes and add speed nuts to the chassis to make it line up with the original Vox holes but, all worked out and everything fits perfectly.
I first tried the amp in one of my 4X12s and although it had the Vox vibe, it needed an opened back cab with old AlNiCos. The AC10 cab has the original, unreconed AlNiCo 10s from 65 still in it. They sound fine, but I never used that cabinet with any of my other amps as it lacked bass and just sounded thin. However, with the TC15 plugged in, it sounded fantastic! I tried several different guitars in it today and they all sounded killer, whether clean or cranked. This head and this cab are the perfect match. It is not too boomy but not too thin and you can get great, ripping tones from this combo at a reasonable level.
I am quite happy with how my project came out and can't thank Stephen enough for all of his assistance. I finally have a great sounding amp with a vintage vibe that didn't require hacking an antique.


Thanks for looking!