Well the two noval covers came in the mail today and I installed them in the amp. The amp is now done!
I am calling this amp a 20W Plexi.
Here is the interesting stuff










Beautiful head cab built by Trinity. Using NOS JAN 6V6GTs, a NOS Slyvania 12AX7 in V1, EHX 12AX7 in V2 and a NOS RCA 12AX7 in V3. The cabinet on the bottom is my 18W sIII, cab again built by Trinity.
Added a VRM to scale the entire amp (limiting resistor is 220K). The 1M pot is linear taper.
The circuit of the amp is a mix of a JTM45 and a 1959. The voltages of the amp are all within 5V of that of a JTM45 except for the plates of the 6V6's which run 40V less.
The toggle switch closet to the input selects the bypass cap on V2. The switch allows you to select between no cap, 0.68uF cap and 150uF cap. This essentially allows you to go from no boost, to high/mid boost to fat boost. The jack beside the switch allows you to connect a simple SPST footswitch to do the boosting remotely.
The other toggle switch reconfigures the tonestack slope resistor and V2 grid stopper simultaneously. This lets you switch between a JMT45 setup or a later Plexi (1959) preamp. This switch along with the boost switch can make the preamp either a JMT45 preamp or Plexi preamp. The Plexi's ran high voltages than the JMT45s so when in JTM45 mode it is best to turn down the VRM just a touch to dial in a true JMT45 tone.
Going back to the voltages the output stage is setup very carefully. With a 560uF bypass cap and 25V 5W (Paul Ruby mod) Zener the output section is very tight and mimics a fixed bias output section very well. I spent a lot of time getting the dropping resistors and voltages just right, as a result the output tubes are biased at 96% plate dissipation with a 271R 5W cathode resistor. Wouldn't want to go higher than 96% with the large bypass cap (it negates the usual cathode bias NFB).
Added a 10K trim pot on the PI plates to dial in the right amount of "bloom" and balance in the PI.
With all the overspeced parts, elevated heater CT and hum pot, lead dress and design the amp has very little white/floor noise!
Since I already have an sIII I tried to make this amp different and unique from it. This amp is not really an 18W I'd say, it's more of a 20W Plexi. I spent a lot of time trying mods and dialing in the sound (amp has been done a while). Very thick lively tone on this amp. Surprisingly good clean tones (seems all the Plexi's are coming out like this). The amp sounds great with the EQ set flat which is something I don't do much with the sIII. 50uF-50uF filtering along with a inductive/resistive screen supply keeps the amp tight yet very dynamic and rich.
I'll try and post a schematic sometime but circuitry wise it's a real mix of the early and later Marshalls.
Hoping to record some clips of my 18W sIII with Tone Tubby San Rafeal vs. the 20W Plexi with Tone Tuby AlNiCo. Waiting to get my ES-335 back from the shop.