A brake is simply an L-pad attenuator on the speaker, that allows you to crank the amp to distortion and then cut the signal level going to the speaker, so you can play an overdriven or distorted output stage at low volume levels. This being a very simple two stage direct coupled amp there are only a few ways and places where one can control levels - with a pot at the input, at the cathode of the EL84 (with a variable resistor in series the cathode bypass cap to adjust the gain), or with an adjustable L-pad brake at the output.
I think we're about 90% of the way there. There is a slight issue of what seems to be blocking distortion on the low strings that seems to be related to the very high impedance of the grid leak at the cap input first stage. The issue is a slight case of "farting out", the transition into distortion is not as gradual as it should be it, sort of cuts in and out at times when you are right at the threshold due to the waveform at the grid being pushed down into cutoff and taking some time to recover to the correct bias point. The issue shows itself with higher output humbuckers. Single coils like the sweet Teisco gold foil on my Tele and stock single coils seem to work very well. We're going to analyze this over the next day or two and figure out a way to minimize it - besides "stop using humbuckers" ;^)>.
« Last Edit: March 28, 2012, 11:21:39 AM by Doc B. »
Dan "Doc B." Schmalle
President For Life
Bottlehead Corp.