Ok, it's taken me a couple of days and some profanity but my speedballed Crack is now up and running, and it's hard to wipe the sh**eating grin off my face as I lie back with my HD650's and a large single malt. Thank you big time Doc and everyone else on here whose advice has been invaluable. I suspect a large part of my satisfaction is down to having built the beast with my own hands as you say, but there is no denying the sheer quality of the sound I am getting, leagues ahead of the Little Dot 2 it is replacing.
A couple of caveats: Despite never having soldered or built anything like this in my life, I whizzed through the Crack build without issue, other than my stupidity in continually reading the word "attach" as "solder". Hence I kept I kept having to go back to a nicely made joint and undo it to attach another wire.
May I humbly suggest that next time you rewrite the instructions you make it a bit more clear for morons like me, that Attach means fix, but don't yet solder?
Secondly, my instant success with the Crack, which fired up first time, made me complacent with the Speedball.
Again, I can only blame my incompetence, but the Speedball does require another level of finesse and precision which I was not prepared for. In particular, my clunker of a soldering iron was way to big and hot for the smaller pads and components here, and made for some ugly joints. Some of the closely spaced solder pads could be safely bridged (inadvertently or not..) but others, equally close spaced, could not. Perhaps this could be made more clear?
My other issue was with the finer wire. The finer gauge solid wire and incompetent stripping led to several scored cores and subsequent breaks. And as each time the A and B boards were unscrewed to fix one connection more flex was applied to the other wires, break followed break and the E and I pads became quite a mess. I'm sure there is some valid reason but perhaps you could explain why braided wire is unacceptable here?
And finally, there are are numerous solder pads and legends on the A and B boards unused. R3, R4, 432, Cc,'K, Rc. I'm guessing they are leftover from some prototyping but I'm curious as to what they are or if the voltages/ resistances across them could be useful in troubleshooting? I've read this forum quite far back and have yet to find anything on this.
But again, despite my whinging. a superb product and support, my profound kudos.
Best regards