Saturday, 6 October 2012

The last week of work has been by far the most productive week in terms of understanding, accomplishment, and overall completion. 

The first thing that I had to finish was the fibreboard. At the start of the week, I had most of the capacitors and resistors on it. This was tricky because I had to look at the circuit diagram and then back at the schematic to make sure that I got everything right. The fibreboard traces and wires on the underside of the board were the hardest to do because there were so many holes. It was rather easy to get confused and put a wire in the wrong hole. 

Rafael came over on saturday to make sure that I hadn't done anything potentially damaging or even life threatening. There were 3 main questions that I had for him.

1. How do you know where to put all the cables that come off of the power transformer when some don't show up on the circuit diagram and the schematic. 

2. How and where do I connect the ground bus wire? 

3. How to get to the 6.3 heaters from the power transformer and the pilot light? 

The first question has yet to be answered and I'm going to meet up with him next saturday to clear it up and finish it.

The second question, however, has been solved. The bus needs to be attached in some way shape or form to the ground wire that comes off of the mains outlet and the chassis. The easiest way to do this was to attach both onto a screw and bolt that were conveniently near where the AC mains line comes into the chassis. This prevents the chassis from ever becoming live.

Rafael also pointed out that I had a capacitor between the ground and the live wires which is arbitrary and not suitable for British electrical law. 

The third question I figured out by myself on wikipedia. Each of the tubes needs to have 2 twisted 6.3 heater wire so that they can warm up before being played. The way to do this involved a fun and slightly unorthodox method. Basically, I had to strap two wires in place on the side of a desk and then attach them both to a power drill. By spinning the drill head, the two wires spun around each other tightly so that there would be no hum when the amp is played. I connected these to one of the tubes yesterday, but I'm going to do the rest today.

Finally, I sent an email to my supervisor telling him about the state of the project and my progress so far. I still need to finish up some small components, attack all of the 6.3 volt heater wires, install the fibreboard into the chassis, finish off the wires in the power transformer, and connect the AC mains line. 

I suspect this should be done and tested by Saturday!



 Upper side of the fiberboard
 Fiberboard + the outer capacitors
 The input jacks - Still havent finished those!
 The whole layout
 Chassis!
 Power transformer connections
Fiberboard in massive disarray

Thursday, 27 September 2012

Progress - 28 Sept

Although I didn't have a whole lot of time (about an hour and a half...) I thought I made some really significant progress yesterday. The hardest part after finishing the chassis outer components and external hardware was to actually start the soldering and get into it. 

I had to make sure that I had all of the components ready and available. The most difficult bit of this is trying to decipher the circuit diagram and the schematic. At my current level of electronic knowledge, the schematic is too hard to decipher on my own, so I need to use the circuit diagram to help me out as well. I have read however, that the best way to learn how to read schematics is to do and to just jump right in and build. So far after working on the fibreboard  I agree with this. Previously I was terrified of this schematic that didn't make any sense to me. Afterwards, I then started to notice correlations and different things that made sense in the context of real life. Positive and negative directions, different symbols, quantities of various components and wires, etc. Very happy with my progress and although I can't work much today, I'm going to try and do a long session on Saturday to appease this. 

Earlier today, I also met with my supervisor to have a 'check-up' and to to get one of the stock research sheets signed. I explained to him the progress that I've made, plans for the future, and also my own personal optimism towards this project. He asked me some questions, made sure I was doing alright, and asked me how my research was going. I said that it was going according to plan and that I've got a huge sheet of sources that I'm going to put on noodle tools soon. He nodded and signed me off and I felt that this was a productive meeting because it was the first one where I didn't feel that I was slightly underprepared or nervous. 

Below are some pictures of the progress so far. The fibreboard looks a bit empty, but that should change in the days to come. I've also emailed Raphael to possibly have him over to review and oversee my project for a day. Make sure everything is going alright. I'm sure he will be pleased with my progress.


 The whole workspace including the chassis, fibreboard, components, tools, soldering iron, magnification light, etc. The case/house is below the desk in the back, it's barely visible.
 Fibreboard

External Capacitors

Saturday, 15 September 2012

Parts Have Arrived

So, today is September the 15th, 2012. I haven't been posting much in a while because there hasn't been that much progress in the last few weeks. This is mainly because after sourcing, finding, and ordering parts, ect, there wasn't much to do. I looked through a lot of books, researched a lot of websites, ect.

Last week, I contacted my Personal Project supervisor, Mr. Weatherley, and he thought I was getting along with the project well with some "delayed production" (which I completely agree with.) Since the parts are here, I'm in the process of unboxing them and taking inventory of all my components. I also have the revised schematic which I'll post below. At some point I need to clear my desk upstairs so that I have some workspace to actually do something, can't do it on a carpet....

A few weeks back, my noodle-tools account wasn't working because the school needed to re-validate it. I lost some sources in the process so I need to go ahead and find them. That won't take too long however because I have well above the required amount of sources for this project.

 Boxes of Parts
 List of parts that came (There's 4 pages!)
 Various components
 The speakers - Jenson, nice quality
Revised Schematic

Tuesday, 21 August 2012

Amped

Amped




So, today I was reading this book called "Amped" that my dad got me about the history of different amplifiers and I came across an interesting page that I wanted to compare with my project. 

This particular page showed the 1960 Fender Showman 6G14, an amplifier made by Fender in 1960 (obviously...). It takes a substantially bigger in size than my design and the interior parts physically seem far more complicated than what Raphaël was showing me. It has requires the same wattage as the bassman 100 design that I am basing my amp off of (100 watts) and it has four tubes. 

I went onto google and searched up the schematic for this amp, I found this.

It has four tubes like mine (although I'm getting rid of two of them because they're arbitrary, according to Raphaël) and much of it looks similar. My basic observation of it is that it isn't more complicated than my own, it's simply cruder and so it looks more complicated because it's a pioneer amp in the industry according to the book. Like mine, it doesn't have a bass section. The book claims that this amp was built specifically for "loud" so I'm guessing that's why the chassis is far bigger than my own.


Update about my project 

I'm really getting irritated because parts are taking forever to arrive and I really don't have as much time as I would like left... Basically a month to complete the entire project! Obviously I want to meet my specifications and be enthusiastic about the state of my project by the deadline, but we'll see. 


Monday, 20 August 2012

So I'm back, parts are coming, I've read a lot, hope to get started on the actual project this week once they arrive.

Peace...