Low-Cost Guitar Amplifier

The aim of this design was to reproduce a Combo amplifier of the type very common in the 'sixties and the 'seventies of the past century. It is well suited as a guitar amplifier but it will do a good job with any kind of electronic musical instrument or microphone. 5W power hasil was a common feature of these widespread devices due to the general adoption of a group A single-tube hasil stage (see the Vox AC-4 model). Furthermore, nowadays we can do without the old-fashioned Vib-Trem feature frequently included in those designs.

The present circuit can deliver 10W of hasil power when driving an 8 Ohm load, or about 18W @ 4 Ohm. It also features a two-FET preamplifier, two inputs with different sensitivity, a treble-cut control and an optional switch allowing overdrive or powerful treble-enhancement.

Guitar Amplifier Circuit Diagram:

Guitar Amplifier Circuit Diagram

Parts:

P1______________4K7 Linear Potentiometer

P2_____________10K Log. Potentiometer

R1,R2__________68K 1/4W Resistors

R3____________220K 1/4W Resistor

R4,R6,R11_______4K7 1/4W Resistors

R5_____________27K 1/4W Resistor

R7______________1K 1/4W Resistor

R8______________3K3 1/2W Resistor

R9______________2K 1/2W Trimmer Cermet

R10___________470R 1/4W Resistor

R12_____________1K5 1/4W Resistor

R13___________470K 1/4W Resistor

R14____________33K 1/4W Resistor

C1____________100pF 63V Ceramic Capacitor

C2____________100nF 63V Polyester Capacitor

C3____________470?F 35V Electrolytic Capacitor

C4____________220nF 63V Polyester Capacitor (Optional, see Notes)

C5_____________47?F 25V Electrolytic Capacitor (Optional, see Notes)

C6______________1?F 63V Polyester Capacitor

C7,C8,C9,C10___47?F 25V Electrolytic Capacitors

C11____________47pF 63V Ceramic Capacitor

C12__________1000?F 35V Electrolytic Capacitor

C13__________2200?F 35V Electrolytic Capacitor

D1_____________5mm. Red LED

D2,D3________1N4004 400V 1A Diodes

Q1,Q2________2N3819 General-purpose N-Channel FETs

Q3____________BC182 50V 200mA NPN Transistor

Q4____________BD135 45V 1.5A NPN Transistor (See Notes)

Q5____________BDX53A 60V 8A NPN Darlington Transistor

Q6____________BDX54A 60V 8A PNP Darlington Transistor

J1,J2________6.3mm. Mono Jack sockets

SW1____________1 pole 3 ways rotary switch (Optional, see Notes)

SW2____________SPST Mains switch

F1_____________1.6A Fuse with socket

T1_____________220V Primary, 48V Center-tapped Secondary 20 to 30VA Mains transformer

PL1____________Male Mains plug

SPKR___________One or more speakers wired in series or in parallel, Total resulting impedance: 8 or 4 Ohm, Minimum power handling: 20W

Notes:

  • SW1 and related capacitors C4 & C5 are optional.
  • When SW1 slider is connected to C5 the overdrive feature is enabled.
  • When SW1 slider is connected to C4 the treble-enhancer is enabled.
  • C4 value can be varied from 100nF to 470nF to suit your treble-enhancement preferences.
  • In all cases where Darlington transistors are used as the output devices it is essential that the sensing transistor (Q4) should be in as close thermal contact with the output transistors as possible. Therefore a TO126-case transistor type was chosen for easy bolting on the heatsink, very close to the output pair.
  • To set quiescent current, remove temporarily the Fuse F1 and insert the probes of an Avo-meter in the two leads of the fuse holder.
  • Set the volume control to the minimum and Trimmer R9 to its minimum resistance.
  • Power-on the circuit and adjust R9 to read a current drawing of about 25 to 30mA.
  • Wait about 15 minutes, watch if the current is varying and readjust if necessary.
Technical data are quite impressive for so simple a design:

Sensitivity:

30mV input for 10W output

Frequency response:

40 to 20KHz -1dB

Total harmonic distortion @ 1KHz and 10KHz, 8 Ohm load:

below 0.05% @ 1W, 0.08% @ 3.5W, 0.15% at the onset of clipping (about 10W).