So I received some great internal pictures of a IIC+ - thanks so much! - and have revisited my III+ mod. For reference, the sloclones IIC+ schematic is 100% accurate for the amp I was sent pics of (completely coincidental). That said, in other C+s I've seen and where people have reported values, some resistor and cap values differ between IIC+s. This doesn't help add to the 'no IIC+s sound the same' problem! (well it's a problem when drawing up schematics - WHICH IIC+ would you like a schematic for or would you like your amp to sound like?
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Anyway with this new info in mind, there were two steps I missed due to not having a verified IIC+ schematic. Adding a 0.022uF cap in the lead circuit after the 680K R26 resistor (just add it between the lead drive pot and the wire coming off R26) and removing C23 as it's not in the power circuit for the IIC+ (easy) and adding in and rewiring the high voltage supplies for the 12AX7 preamp tubes (difficult!).
With this high voltage supply, what I'm talking about is this:
Mark IIC+
D+ V1, V3, V4 (~330-350V)
D V2 (~360V)
C V5 (~380-400V)
Mark III:
D - V1 (362V)
C - V2, V3, V4, V5 (~420V)
So what happens is in the IIC+ the Preamp, Lead and Reverb all work off a lower plate voltage (call it D+) with the voltage depending on which resistors are used between the 30uF filter caps - 1K, 5.6K, 6.6K etc as they vary between amps and which transformer is used as some have higher voltages than others. In the III they're basically all working off a much higher voltage (C) of around 420V. I'm not an expert in valve amp design, but higher voltage is going to mean a more aggressive tone? To quote another forum "Lower voltages tend towards a softer squishier tone/feel while more=a brighter crisper tone but at the cost of a more harsh high end". This would explain a lot of the character of the III as having a rep of being too aggressive.
Anyway I can't claim to have a IIC+ if my plate voltage is 80-100V higher and all of my 12AX7s run off basically the same power rail. I can get everything else identical in spec but not that. So I added in an extra filter cap, did some rewiring and now have the following for my Mark III+:
D+ V1, V3, V4 (355V)
D V2 (362V)
C V5 (418V)
Results: sounds even more incredible!! Master volume doesn't have that crazy kick in effect as badly as before, cleans are great, lead really sings! Just more headroom overall. I 100% guarantee you could get a IIC+ and this side by side and there will be no more difference than putting two IIC+s side by side. It's a bit Frankenstein and headache to understand as you have to do the following for the extra voltage rail but hopefully the pics will explain more:
1. Add in a 30uF filter cap between the old C and old D (I had a spare good but old one lying around but I will replace it with a new one from boogie soon). This added cap becomes new C, old C becomes new D. Add in a 5.6K resistor between original B (stays the same) and new C (higher value resistor for more voltage drop between rails, lower for less). Wire negative pin of 30uF cap to ground using insulated wire.
2. Move the original 5.6K resistor to between new C and new D.
3. Cut the new D trace (old C) from the filter cap to the rest of the amp (see pic - easily reversible by bridging this cut gap with solder if you ever wanted to go back to stock)
4. Wire the D+ filter cap (used to be D) to the V1, V2, V3 and V4 plate voltage resistors with some bridge wire.
5. Desolder the old V2 plate voltage resistors from D+ and run some insulated wire to connect them to new D.
6. Desolder the leg of R282, R129/C24 that used to go to old C and run some insulated wire to wire them up to the new C.
It's easier to see from the pics. The filter cap added just clears the top of the chassis but I might look at moving it elsewhere. This is from a purple stripe board (CP1E) with black stripe values but I think the voltage rails are basically the same on all IIIs.
Anyway to those who say a III to IIC+ can't be done it definitely can! It's VERY involved though to mod to this extreme and unless you know what you're doing I would avoid it. It's not just 'oh change a couple of caps and resistors and there you go'.
Hope that helps someone out there! I may do a thread with full steps and diagrams at some point, and hopefully a Mark III thread where I get all the info up along with schematics for each stripe version and the differences between them.
https://image.ibb.co/ggjVve/IMG_6965.jpg
https://image.ibb.co/dhjkTz/IMG_6966.jpg
https://image.ibb.co/caNHae/IMG_6967.jpg
https://image.ibb.co/jxV3Fe/IMG_6968.jpg
https://image.ibb.co/c3DZMK/IMG_6969.jpg
https://image.ibb.co/imp8gK/IMG_6970.jpg
https://image.ibb.co/ifQ3Fe/IMG_6971.jpg
https://image.ibb.co/nC6zoz/IMG_6972.jpg
https://image.ibb.co/dqbzoz/IMG_6973.jpg
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Thanks,
Jon