Oh, thank you for you response. It is allways nice to learn from you with all your experience.
Yes, it was quite a leap for me, from low voltage pedals to a full amp - and without my friend's wedding as a challenge I wouldn't probably do it.
Even with my first kit. TT SugarBox, I made it "my way" - I see no point in just soldering as it is in the pictures; well, I did make a big mess of a buzzing ground loop monster from this kit, but quite deeply learned about the grounding rules and techniques from this experience. And this attitude of mine goes on; with all my lack of knowledge it is funny, I know. But it is more the concept I am interested in, not drilling holes (or not even that, with predrilled chassis) and doing a nice paintjob. Again, it's true that you don't need to build an amp to test some concept if there is a friend you can ask ... Or even so much as here on this forum. I feel too "inovative" sometimes, I confess
As for the G5 kit, I see no big difference in ordering separate parts myself (and can be also much cheaper, with the right choice of providers), plus there is an extraordinary happiness to make your own BOM an order by it, not only get the box full of bags with assorted components. But really it all started with my fear that I will ruin a component (overheat it with soldering, break the lead ...) and so wanted to have few extras on hand - in the kit you only get one for every needed component. Well, I do trust myself more now (and know, that electronic components ar not so fragile as they look), but still. If it was only about getting the components from the kit together, I wouldn't do it at all (well, maybe for a friend, but not for my pleasure). It's the mods and tweaks I enjoy, and feeling smartass about them
(Well, I do enjoy less all the mistakes I commit in such explorations and troubleshooting them, but I do learn something in the process - I just happened to learn that too short of a leads from the shielded cable are a short circuit playground -__-) I thought I had enough experience from al my LoV TT projects, all sand pedals, all troubleshootings and mods of existing amps that making a "vanilla" G5 would be - boring.
As you are the second one talking about the safety I am really curious if there are certain irregularities you noticed on the pics of the amp or is it said just generally. As I am not from electric engineering field, I don't really know the regulations. I think I observed all the needed safety precautions about earth-to-chassis and ground-to-chassis connections, about arcing and cooling and about fuses. Most of it is already in the schematic. Is there a special thought / advice you would like to give me?
DC heater for all the system was a question of a stubborn concept. I've read so much about the heater hum and all the neaded precautions (but in practice, when looking at the guts of the amps most builders make a mess out of heater wiring) I said to myself, why not DC. All TT LoV projects have a DC heater - I had not only a PSU circuit, but also the PCB. Then 1,8A heater current (or even muuuch more, when tubes cold) proved more of a challenge than I expected - but still, I am in this field for challenge. So this DC heating has grown in my main consideration in G5 bulding, and all was ready to do it with a LDO linear regulator and schottkys, when a friend gave me a cheapo chinese DC/DC switcher module, which proved to be a better solution, specially with lower heat-up. Thank you about the info on pentode sensitivity to hum, it would be much easier to design (and also use 12,6V DC on preamp then). For more, eg. 4 powertubes the tranny would have to be quite big, yes, a separate toroid of approx 100VA would measure 10x3cm and have 1 kilo, in comparison with 10x2cm, 700g for 50VA (but how strong then has to be the tranny for the anodes, my god - is it really nearly 600VA?). So I was thinking to build a power switcher directly from mains voltage, or maybe just tweaking an existing 12V PSU to reach the right voltage. Or use unchanged 12V supply and then supply preamp directly and poweramp through DC/DC converter.
Now I am on the previously mentioned project Yahamaha again, to include an Alembic preamp, with the help of TT Vpump. Now I am in the phase of troubleshooting, I somehow manged to fry the Vpump module ...
Again, thanks for your attention and help.
Jernej