Tiny Guitar Amp Rebuilt With Tiny Tubes

[Blackcorvo] wrote in to tell us how he took a cheap “retro” guitar amplifier and rebuilt it with sub-miniature vacuum tubes. The end result is a tiny portable amplifier that not only looks the part, but sounds it to. He’s helpfully provided wiring schematics, build images, and even a video of the amplifier doing it’s thing.

Detail from the circuit diagram

The original Honeytone amplifier goes for about $26, and while it certainly looks old-school, the internals are anything but. [Blackcorvo] is too much of a gentleman to provide “before” pictures of the internals, but we looked it up and let’s just say it doesn’t exactly scream high quality audio. Reviews online seem to indicate it works about as well as could be expected for an amplifier that costs less than $30, but this is definitely no audiophile gear.

Powering up the miniature vacuum tubes takes a bit of modern support electronics, including a buck converter to provide the high voltage for the tubes as well as a 6V regulator. The plus side is that the new circuit can power the tubes from an input voltage between 12 and 30 volts, meaning the amplifier can still be powered by batteries if you want to take it on the go.

We’ve seen some fantastic tube amplifier builds over the years, proving that some things never go out of style. If you’d like to learn more about the magic that lets these little tubes of hot pixies make beautiful music, the US Army has you covered.

28 thoughts on “Tiny Guitar Amp Rebuilt With Tiny Tubes

  1. I knew this wasn’t going to be “audiophile” as that’s not what you want anyway. Really good sound!
    Nice gobs of even-harmonic distortion.
    Schiz? I have sacks full of these kind of tubes.

    1. You don’t want audiophile in a guitar amp. Everything from the pickup to the speaker colors the sound and is meant to. Ever heard an electric guitar through a stereo system, straight through? It sounds horrible!

        1. Along with cracked cymbals and drums with holes in the head.

          That being said, I like your use of filosofem as if its common knowledge!

    1. Yeah, wow. The original guts were numbingly pedestrian compared to the gorgeous old-fashioned components and construction style it has now!

      Thanks for the comparison, that makes the project even more interesting.

    1. Stay tuned, I’m in the process of designing ‘yet another headphone amp’ with the Nutube which should bear some fruit by the end of the year. (Just got my hands on a HP 8903B to see how well it performs too!)

    2. While those KORG NuTubes look neat, the circuit is more complicated than traditional tube circuits, as each triode requires a buffer at their grids since they have very low input inpedance. Also, they’re a tad expensive at the moment if compared to subminiature tubes. But I do love this new tech they came up with, and I hope to someday get my hands on one of those to try out myself!

    1. Here you go:

      Parts List

      Resistors (all rated at 2w, because of size rather than heat dissipation):

      1x 330R
      1x 1k
      2x 1k5
      1x 3k3
      3x 68k
      1x 100k
      1x 220k
      2x 1M

      Potentiometers:

      2x 500kA (Gain and Volume)
      1x 500kB (Tone)

      Capacitors:

      1x 100p 50v
      2x 4,7n 250v
      2x 10nF 250v
      1x 0.47u 50v
      1x 22uF 50v (6N21B b cathode)
      2x 22uF 250v (B+ nodes)
      1x 220uF 50v

      Output Transformer: 3K:4R/8R, 1 Watt, 120Hz low-end cutoff (custom-made for this project by http://schatz.eng.br

      Voltage Conversion Boards:
      B+ https://m.ebay.com/itm/263382388214
      6V https://m.ebay.com/itm/183032224901

      1. Thank you very much for the parts list I have the same Honey tone Amp but I am going to build this Amp into a repurposed wooden index card holder so I can include a bigger speaker

  2. The 5902 valve has interesting shock characteristics. I suspect that the design life of these tubes could be measured in seconds in the intended applications.

    1. I wouldn’t know how much such a kit could cost, considering the tubes aren’t produced anymore. They’re not expensive or hard to find by any means, but they’re not too widely available either.
      And the output transformer would need to be custom made.
      And I’m in Brazil, which would make shipping it to overseas customers a nightmare because:

      1. The Brazilian mail service is slow;
      2. They often “lose” packages;
      3. They also often mishandle packages;
      4. Shipping might be more expensive than people are willing to pay for.

      If it weren’t for that, I’d get right on making kits of this. I’d love to see people making them!

  3. What songs do you play on the vacuum tube amplifier well the tube amplifier is tubeway so some tubeway army songs and gary numan we are glass a song about glass vacuum tube we are so fragile the valves are delicate I dream of wires the old days of point to point wiring before printed circuits if transistor amplifier has direct coupled transistors one transistor dies and kills the other ones in circuit in song I die you die and high voltage supply for valvedcand its are friends electric if you get an electric shock in the modern solid state age tube way days now seem so unreal

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