So as I usually do, I randomly pick YT videos to watch. Many are related to electronics, as I am a guitar amp builder and electronics tinkering machine. It is often argued that PCB guitar amps are just as good as PTP ( Point To Point ) constructed amps; some may even say superior. I am in the camp as a builder, that PCB construction can be theoretically better, but that the latest and greatest technologies for PCB design are often not employed to make it so. Case in point, a video popped up that shows a very recent design technology that proves clearly that most PCB designs are not made for the best technical operation, but to meet an aesthetic with only a consideration to electrical performance. I.E. your PCB circuit boards are made to look good first and perform well secondly. You can interchange the priority if you like, but in the end, you still have the compromise.
Given the simplicity of 99% of guitar amps, you can almost certainly see that they are both not complex, nor subject to the need for the most advanced and deliberate PCB design. I state openly that PCB is inferior for guitar amp production only because it is not as robust and is not a lifetime construction method. If you want an amp that will last till the end of time, you do it with PTP construction.
A recent offering from Fender, the Tonemaster series, is an example of meeting a bottom line in production. Fender utilizes an ICE power supply and amp module unit. ICE is a company that you, your neighbor, and even your worst enemy can go to and buy a PSU, DSP, and or amplifier module that meets your needs at a very affordable price, especially if you are at the enterprise level. The ICE units are very good, in fact, they are probably so good that they are a part of a pretty large percentage of the everyday products that musicians use. I myself have looked at ICE as a way for a solution to devices I was interested in building. Absolutely nothing wrong with ICE. I only say this because you can see visually that 99% of all modern devices are made to the Aesthetic first, performance second model.
This is as moot a point as breathing water, but as I argue with some individuals about the " Quality of modern PCB design ", we see a glimpse into the reality of it; that only within the past few years has even the best of the best CAD software started introducing theoretical best practices or a way to do PCB construction in free form. PTP construction is an art form, it is art, and it is an art form that from a functional standpoint, will last FOREVER. Depending on who you ask, PTP construction may even transcend art and function in the quantum realm... I am not so stuck on PTP as being a quantum mechanics art form as much as I am of the mind that it is, for the function of guitar amp building, the only proper way to make an amp that you will spend as much as you did on your wife's wedding ring, and will actually stay with you for the rest of your life...
So are PCB-based amps better? They are equal in every way to PTP up until the point they break. PCB is a more economical way to build a guitar amp. You could see it as an analog to above where you buy your wife a $10,000 ring vs giving her a Cracker Jack Box ring... Which marriage will last longer? There is always the .01% that will break the mold, but when it comes to amplifier building you can't bank on .01%, you want a 99.99% design, where you know that it will last FOREVER. Sounding good is easy, it's sounding good forever that is hard, just ask Fender, Marshall, VOX, and many more why they have designs that are still copied 60 years later. It's because those amps are still around that we have a reference to compare to. No one, NO ONE, will be looking back 60 years from now saying how do we remake a Blackstar St. James amp in modern technology... There are two types of amplifier buyers, those who buy toys, or those who buy the best that money can buy. I was at one point a buyer of toys, now I want an amp that stands the test of time, one that will go to my grandchildren's grandchildren, and then on.
Given the simplicity of 99% of guitar amps, you can almost certainly see that they are both not complex, nor subject to the need for the most advanced and deliberate PCB design. I state openly that PCB is inferior for guitar amp production only because it is not as robust and is not a lifetime construction method. If you want an amp that will last till the end of time, you do it with PTP construction.
A recent offering from Fender, the Tonemaster series, is an example of meeting a bottom line in production. Fender utilizes an ICE power supply and amp module unit. ICE is a company that you, your neighbor, and even your worst enemy can go to and buy a PSU, DSP, and or amplifier module that meets your needs at a very affordable price, especially if you are at the enterprise level. The ICE units are very good, in fact, they are probably so good that they are a part of a pretty large percentage of the everyday products that musicians use. I myself have looked at ICE as a way for a solution to devices I was interested in building. Absolutely nothing wrong with ICE. I only say this because you can see visually that 99% of all modern devices are made to the Aesthetic first, performance second model.
This is as moot a point as breathing water, but as I argue with some individuals about the " Quality of modern PCB design ", we see a glimpse into the reality of it; that only within the past few years has even the best of the best CAD software started introducing theoretical best practices or a way to do PCB construction in free form. PTP construction is an art form, it is art, and it is an art form that from a functional standpoint, will last FOREVER. Depending on who you ask, PTP construction may even transcend art and function in the quantum realm... I am not so stuck on PTP as being a quantum mechanics art form as much as I am of the mind that it is, for the function of guitar amp building, the only proper way to make an amp that you will spend as much as you did on your wife's wedding ring, and will actually stay with you for the rest of your life...
So are PCB-based amps better? They are equal in every way to PTP up until the point they break. PCB is a more economical way to build a guitar amp. You could see it as an analog to above where you buy your wife a $10,000 ring vs giving her a Cracker Jack Box ring... Which marriage will last longer? There is always the .01% that will break the mold, but when it comes to amplifier building you can't bank on .01%, you want a 99.99% design, where you know that it will last FOREVER. Sounding good is easy, it's sounding good forever that is hard, just ask Fender, Marshall, VOX, and many more why they have designs that are still copied 60 years later. It's because those amps are still around that we have a reference to compare to. No one, NO ONE, will be looking back 60 years from now saying how do we remake a Blackstar St. James amp in modern technology... There are two types of amplifier buyers, those who buy toys, or those who buy the best that money can buy. I was at one point a buyer of toys, now I want an amp that stands the test of time, one that will go to my grandchildren's grandchildren, and then on.