Sugar Man · 70939
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I'll have another crack at this, the list is kind of long:1. The 3K resistor in parallel with each 2K resistor should be removed and replaced by an 8.2K resistor (a Vishay PR-03 will probably fit OK). This adjusts the cathode bias voltage.2. The 130R/3W resistors in the power supply need to be removed and replaced with 600 ohm 5W resistors. It may be easier to just replace the two resistors that go from the 5 lug strip by the power transformer to the other two 5 lug strips with 1.1K/10W resistors and leave the other two 130 ohm resistors where they are. Your mileage may vary, let us know which way works best. This change lowers the power supply voltage for the 45.3. The 0.15 ohm resistors need to be removed and replaced with 0.22 ohm 2W resistors (3W is fine too). This will reduce the filament voltage to 2.5V when the 45 is plugged in (the 2A3 draws more current, so if you don't change the resistors the filament voltage will be too high).4. The black wire from each plate choke needs to be disconnected from the power supply and the red wire connected in its place. This sets the plate choke to the higher inductance/lower current setting for the 45.5. The parallel feed capacitor should be increased to a 5uF/630V part (4.7uF is totally OK). This works in conjunction with step 4.The presence of the DC filament upgrade will change the value of those 0.22 ohm resistors. If someone can report what filament voltage they are getting (DC voltage between pins 1/4) with the 45 and the DC filament supply, we can suggest tweaks to those values.I think this is everything. If anybody buys the parts and performs the steps, let us know and we can direct you to some voltage measurements to check that things are operating properly.I would also note that the shunt regulated driver stage might call for tweaking the power supply dropping resistors a little bit as well. It may be that a pair of 1K/10W resistors and 2 of the 4 original 130R resistors might be a better combo in the power supply.
I think there's still time for someone to be the first.
If you have any kind of tube friendly speakers, the 45 can be pure magic. My SR-45 is still my number one amp by a long margin...John
I haven't found a post on it, so I'll add this to the mix: EML has a new "45B" tube that can deliver twice the output power of a regular 45.Continuous Plate Dissipation 22Watt Power Output in Class A 5.2Watt