Does anyone make a Slo Clone? A bag of parts that lets you build your own?
I would build one, but can't drop 5k on an amp.

Jeremy,
Not exactly, I think it was only really an issue if you used both amp channels at similar gain and volume levels. The vactrols used to switch channels could have some residual leak and if so would allow some interaction between the channels. It was especially noticeable if you used higher clean channel gain and less gain channel gain. If the vactrol didn't completely decouple them, there was bad interaction!
The amp had several design flaws if you will. Using vactrols was one of them. Vactrols are LDR switches, IE. they are light-dependent resistors. If they aren't tuned perfectly, there is a possibility that they could leak signal through. If the channel switching vactrol's leaked, there was an uneven number of stages that could mix together just before the FX loop. The more gain you used on the clean channel, the more it would mix in, out of phase with the gain channel signal, potentially causing issues. The FX loop was a big part of the amps sound, and because it could distort and how it was implemented in the chain, it was never actually out of circuit so to speak. I am not a fan of cathode followers, this amp utilizes two of them... Vactrols are nice because they are very fast, silent, and utilize little power vs that of relay's which could pop when switched, were slow to switch, and had more power needs.
The circuit as a whole is not a magic bullet by any means. Mike Soldano was lucky in that he was the first to find a way to hot rod a Marshall and still be fairly unique, and also to start the high gain amp movement. Realistically he burned up two tubes just to get an FX loop in the thing, but the way he did it more or less wasted the energy from the two tubes ( he dumps 99% of the signal going out of the FX send, and the return stage is there to simply make that loss back up ) and you could overdrive the FX loop from either the preamp or the return making for some ugly sounds if too egregious. The power amp stage was designed to stay clean and NOT break up. The power amp section contributed very little to the distortion of the amp. Almost 100% of the distortion in this amp is coming from the preamp. When I finally understood what he was trying to do and why he did it that way, I was less amused and turned off by the design. It does what only a Soldano can do, beyond that, it only does what a Soldano can do.
What amps do you recommend that do the SLO thing better than the SLO? You make it sound like he was a dunderhead who was in the right place at the right time.
Certainly, here we are 30 years on, someone must have improved upon it? Or maybe it defined an era and people want *that* sound?
I totally get it if people want it "because Soldano" for same reason people buy Harleys, even though objectively they ain't the greatest performance machines.
I guess if I had to come up with a list of amps based on reliability, ease of service, and quality of build; as much as it pains me to say it, Marshall kind of takes the win. BUTTTTTTTTT, it has to be the top-line models like the HW series, JCM-800, and other older models that were only two channels. Their modern multi-channel ( JVM, DSL, and similar ) amps are not as easy to repair when things go wrong.
Interestingly, most of Marshall's classic designs are now so comparatively simple, that they are hard to mess up. Any amp that can be replicated with a point to point turret board construction will be easy to repair, problem-free, and excel at a particular sound. This is what made the Soldano so good when it was first introduced. Aside from the vactrols, it really was as well made of an amp as it could possibly be. Many earlier Friedman's and Bogner's were much the same until they went commercial and sold out to BAD. Now, most of the amps sold through BAD have a hybrid PCB turret board. Morgan's are now PCB turrets, Bogner's have gone to all-out PCB, and Friedman's, depending on the model is either PCB or PCB Turret board. This leads us to Mesa..... The earliest company to embrace PCB construction with lots of ribbon connectors and stacked PCBs. They offered lots of features in a small or at least standard size package, which forced the need for PCB construction, unfortunately leading them to be the most hated name on a repair technician's workbench.
Bogner amps have never been made by BAD (only their cabs and pedals), and their heads have always been PCB with the sole exception of the Helios. Furthermore, PCB is a better method of construction when it comes to performance and consistency; as anyone who knows anything about amps knows, interference between components is a big deal, and PCB minimizes this.I guess if I had to come up with a list of amps based on reliability, ease of service, and quality of build; as much as it pains me to say it, Marshall kind of takes the win. BUTTTTTTTTT, it has to be the top-line models like the HW series, JCM-800, and other older models that were only two channels. Their modern multi-channel ( JVM, DSL, and similar ) amps are not as easy to repair when things go wrong.
Interestingly, most of Marshall's classic designs are now so comparatively simple, that they are hard to mess up. Any amp that can be replicated with a point to point turret board construction will be easy to repair, problem-free, and excel at a particular sound. This is what made the Soldano so good when it was first introduced. Aside from the vactrols, it really was as well made of an amp as it could possibly be. Many earlier Friedman's and Bogner's were much the same until they went commercial and sold out to BAD. Now, most of the amps sold through BAD have a hybrid PCB turret board. Morgan's are now PCB turrets, Bogner's have gone to all-out PCB, and Friedman's, depending on the model is either PCB or PCB Turret board. This leads us to Mesa..... The earliest company to embrace PCB construction with lots of ribbon connectors and stacked PCBs. They offered lots of features in a small or at least standard size package, which forced the need for PCB construction, unfortunately leading them to be the most hated name on a repair technician's workbench.