Yikes! You want MORE GAIN! OK... This is the High Gain Option Retube Kit for the Peavey 5150 II and 6505+. The preamp section uses four handpicked High Gain ECC83S's for V1 thru V4, a standard ECC83S in V5 and a High Gain balanced ECC83S for the phase inverter in V6. The default power tubes are a matched quad of the JJ 6L6GC's but you can configure this kit to use the JJ 5881's or the Integrated 6L6GC / KT66 Quad by clicking on the "Customize" button!
Yikes! You want MORE GAIN! OK... This is the High Gain Option Retube Kit for the Peavey 5150 II and 6505+. The preamp section uses four handpicked High Gain ECC83S's for V1 thru V4, a standard ECC83S in V5 and a High Gain balanced ECC83S for the phase inverter in V6. The default power tubes are a matched quad of the JJ 6L6GC's but you can configure this kit to use the JJ 5881's or the Integrated 6L6GC / KT66 Quad by clicking on the "Customize" button!
Yikes! You want MORE GAIN! OK... This is the High Gain Option Retube Kit for the Peavey 5150 II and 6505+. The preamp section uses four handpicked High Gain ECC83S's for V1 thru V4, a standard ECC83S in V5 and a High Gain balanced ECC83S for the phase inverter in V6. The default power tubes are a matched quad of the JJ 6L6GC's but you can configure this kit to use the JJ 5881's or the Integrated 6L6GC / KT66 Quad by clicking on the "Customize" button!
The Balanced High Gain ECC83S is located in V6 farthest from the input jack and the High Gain ECC83S's are located in V1 thru V4.A note about "V" numbers. Some wise guy at Peavey decided to randomly label the preamp tubes, so the V numbers that are listed on the schematic starting from the first position which is closest to the input jack starts with V6, then V1, V2, V5, V3 and V4. The small minority of players who venture into reading the schematics have discovered this and ask why? Good question... They also ask why we refer to the tubes as V1 thru V6 starting with the preamp tube closest to the input jack.The Answer? It's MUCH easier and less time consuming to explain this to a very small number of players than to explain to hundreds if not thousands of players that you count 6, 1, 2, 5, 3 and 4... So we refer to the V numbers as V1 thru V6!