My Elkit TU-8600S build review and questions


Midway through the build of my TU-8600S build with Lundahl transformers.  
Some thoughts and questions.  Keep in mind I am a rank amateur so take what I say with a grain of salt. Open to correction and suggestions.

Well thought out kit. This is my first build of any kind. Complete beginner.  Tedious and meticulous work  but if you pay attention to detail and can solder it can be done. My soldering  skills are minimal, so I bought a few practice kits.

Here we go:

Through hole solder pads are single-sided with no copper lining the hole.  Also, the pads do not go to the the edge of the hole. (There is a fraction of millimeter of bare plastic PCB board around the hole).  Unless you bend the leads perfectly flat, which is near impossible, there is no metal to metal contact between the leads and the solder pad  

The entire speaker level output of both channels goes through rather flimsy looking spring metal contacts inside a tiny cheap headphone jack before it goes to the speaker binding post. When you plug the headphone in, it breaks the contact. Seems rather a waste to have high end cables and binding post when the entire signal is passing through a tiny point of contact in a cheap jack first. An argument can be made for listening to a tube amp from the transformer secondaries (speaker out)  to get the magic of the output tubes and transformers, but this seems a poor way to implement it. I would’ve preferred a high-quality switch.

Question: I can bend the output leg  from the speaker ohm selector switch up and wire from there directly to the speaker terminals. This will bypass the headphone jack, cheesy contacts and all. Of course, then I would not have a headphone output.  I don’t even own headphones…But I’m still on the fence. Thoughts?

Resistors. Kit comes with half watt miniature resistors. Unknown quality or type. Often recommended to replace, but the hole spacing it’s too close together for most quality 1/2 watt resistors.  Meticulous looped bending of the resistor leads is required to upgrade. Ridiculous. Please, Elkit, Make the holes further apart to accommodate better resistors!

My prior  understanding was that the TU-8600S had limited local feedback. There is an output from the primary  side of transformer (apparently unique to this kit) that runs back to the output tube labeled “cathode NFB” on the schematics. However, there is also a line going from the output transformer secondary windings (speaker side ) all the way back to the cathode of the first input tube.  I have very limited knowledge on such, but this seems to me like it is a global NFB feedback loop.
Q: Hoping somebody smarter than me can enlighten me. Is this global NFB?

 

My modifications.

Against advice, I have gone with metal film takman resistors throughout with two exceptions.  (The carbon film takman throughout is the “favored” upgrade).  

My thoughts on this. Carbon equals noise. Hiss. (The only thing I hate worse than hiss is hum) and no benefit throughout much of the circuit.

The “magic” from carbon is that the resistance varies with voltage. Yes, this is a form of distortion.  But so what? Tube audio is about the subtle distortion that our brain likes. Auditory heroin. If we were after a perfect signal, we would not be listening to SET tube amplifiers. This Variance of resistance with voltage is most pronounced with carbon composite resistors. Carbon film still have some, but it is reduced. Here is the catch: At lower voltage, this variable effect is negligible to nonexistent. At low voltage all you’re getting are looser tolerances and noise from carbon. Not what you want the input stages, feedback loops or power supply.   The place where you have the high-voltage and voltage swing to induce this effect are on the plate load resistors. R105, R205  and R112, 212. Oh, importantly, you do not want to up the wattage of these resistors as this will negate the effect. I used takman 1/2 watt carbon film in the first and AMRG 2 watt carbon film in latter.  Reality? This is likely a load of crap! Probably no audible difference.  But it will sound better! Because I did it!

I left all of the electrolytic capacitors stock—Nippon Chem-Con 105 degree. Good reliable capacitor.

For coupling caps I’m using Audio Note Copper Foil first  and V caps to output tube. These capacitors will functional electrically in either direction, BUT you want to hook the outer foil to the incoming signal in the inner foil to the outgoing signal. The Signal coming out of the inner foil is shielded by the outer foil, thus noise is reduced.

thoughts, questions and ridicule all welcome! I’m about to wire in the headphone jack!  Input on this needed soon!

Thanks all

 

Rob

 

 

73max

Rob, if I am not mistaken, I recall a review of this amp and what a superb job it did with headphones.  So I wouldn't disable or bypass it.  Give it a try as is and then decide.  You can always modify it later.

It can be a blessing and curse building kits like this.  Like you, I am prone to analysis paralysis at times.  You can really obsess over these things--imagine the signal having to go through all those blobs of solder as the primary conductor or forcing it through a lousy headphone jack! (this is where I struggle with cables a bit.  Audioquest used to draw the analogy of light passing through many panes of glass to reach its destination.  If there are two hundred panes of optically inferior glass does it really matter if the last one is perfect?)  

So I am not saying these things don't matter.  Just keep it in perspective and build the amp.  I read some really nice things about this amp in its stock form  and matched up in the right system suspect you will be quite pleased.

Why not install a high quality dpst switch across headphone jack pin 4,5 and 7,8 to bypass the cheesy contacts:

When the switch close, headphone jack is bypassed.

When the switch open, headphone jack is enabled. 

DC voltage is almost always a constant in a circuit such as yours. So you should not think twice about that issue. Also carbon film are far more stable than CC types. One issue with CC types is drift of the resistance after repeated heating. CF won’t do that. If possible, I’d build the whole thing using point to point wiring, since the PCBs are so crappy, and do bypass the headphone jack.