
So I have picked up both a ZVS boost and a buck converter to build a full featured mini amp for home use. These things are capable of much more power than I'll be using here and with a suitable DC power supply then a 30-40W PP amp could be built and the power supply would only cost 7 or 8 dollars, assuming you have an old laptop PSU doing nothing!
Here is the ZVS running off a shitty unregulated 9V@500mA wallwart to test the unit:

Boom, works as expected. There is a little trimmer between the DC input and filter cap on the left of the board which allows you to dial in the output voltage from anywhere between just above the input to the full 380VDC. I must add a quick note on safety here and state that if anyone does want to go down this route that it is absolutely imperative that the PSU that they use has the safety ground pin on the plug connected to the DC negative terminal so that the chassis can be earth bonded to stop the chassis from going live in the event of component failure of an HV short to the chassis! This should be common on all good laptop supplies but you must check first. Shitty 3rd party ones often use a floating supply and aren't suitable for use here as there is nowhere for the HV to go if something goes wrong.
This thread and my Imgur album will be documenting what can be done with these cool little supplies. I've picked up a 600x400mm sheet of aluminium as a test chassis to try out circuit elements in without having to worry about space or having to care that I've drilled a million holes in it. Some folks will probably remember that I built a small ecc99 amp in a purple Hammond chassis while back, well originally my plan was to prototype using a DIY aluminium sheet chassis but I fucked up bending the sheet as my DIY brake left a lot to be desired. I then used the Hammond chassis as I wanted to get on with it, although it was nowhere near big enough. This time I'll be using the metalworkshop at work to do the bending so it should be smooth sailing.
In the end I want to shoot for something like the Fryette GP/DI in terms of functionality in so much that as well as being a standalone 4W amp I want it to have an FX loop (MOSFET a la metro zero loss) and an internal reactive dummy load for direct recording. Since I'll have a solid low voltage DC supply to use that wont fuck with the HV supply I can test out adding a buffered isolation transformer to the output of the dummy load and perhaps even an analogue cab sim for hooking straight into the desk. The actual preamp doesn't matter so much at this stage but I want something blackface fender and a modern high gain channel as a starting point.
This will be by far the most ambitious project I've ever undertaken so don't expect particularly fast progress
