cletus \$m[1]:Awesome! I'm totally stoked to see you have completed a whole rack full of pre's as your first DIY project! My post " SCA Pre's for First Time DIYer" has not gotten a reply yet but in it I was asking wether or not there were any first time success stories. I'm glad to see there are! I can't wait to get started on some kits myself. I've soldered cables before but nothing on a circuit board. I have to wait until i get a few more mics cuz I can't justify having a bunch of pre's w/o mics to match. I already have two API 512c's so I'll be getting a couple of A12's to use with them for drums, 4 N72's, and 2 J99's! How long did it take you to finish an A12 and an N72? Congratulations bro!
PEACE!!!!
I've done some soldering as well, but nothing major. I ordered 2 N72's to start out with. When they came and I saw all the parts in the kit I will admit, I was a little intimidated but I took a deep breath and started to part out the resistors and caps. I took my time with everything and it came out fine. Those first 2 took me about 3 days to finish. When I tested them I was sold. EVERYTHING sounded better through them. Before the N72's, the best pre's I had were 4 ch. of the Sytek with the Burr Browns and 4 ch. of HHB Radius40. Not that there's anything wrong with either of those but the n72 was SO MUCH BETTER in every way. I did a bunch of test recording on different sources with all 3 pres. Kick, snare, overheads, clean guitar w/roland jc120, od guitar w/fender hotrod delux, heavy gain guitar w/marshall jcm200 and boogie dual rec and in every case the n72 won and won big. I knew that i needed to finish this rack. So I oredered 2 more n72's and 4 a12's.
When the new kits came I started off with the a12's. The first one took me about 4 hours to do and by the time I did the 4 th it was down to 2 hours. The final 2 n72's took about 5 or 6 hours each. The biggest thing I can recommend is to stay organized. And don't rush. Make sure you follow the directions and use the tools for the job at hand. Buy a good wire stripper. I didn't think it was a big deal, I always stripped wire before with either a blade or my teeth but when you're stripping wire on the transformer you only really get one chance so do it right and buy a stripper. Hand test all the resistors. This takes time but don't trust your eyes on the color coding.
I say get the kits now if you have the $$$$$$$. Whatever mics you have will sound better and what ever mics you get in the future will sound great. The first test I did with each on was just talking into it with a 57 and headphones. It sounded huge just on my lousy talking voice. I plugged it into my other pre's to see the difference and I couldn't believe it.
Steve
I like my sound big and fat, I don't like my women that way...