I don't have a pic at hand, but take this pic -
remove the HT and filament power transformer and replace with two trannies, one for HT and the other for filament, add a choke and additional cap to the HT, remove the valve recifier (I'm not saying valve rect is necessarily a bad thing, I've been meaning to get around to it), add a ferrite around the mains cables, replace the I/V resistors with a 50R Rhopoint (best resistor in existence IMO), replace the load resistors (which are underneath the board in this pic) with the original Australian made IRH non-magnetic ceramics, change a few other resistors, change the mains wire, make it less deadly, put the lid on and Tada! you have my original DAC. I think the original Nippon Chemicon OSCONs have been replaced by Sanyos in the pictued DAC, but I use Sanyos in special situations now. Oh, and the relay de-thump has been removed in this one.
Anyway, I'll post a picture when I get a chance.
I'm not saying that going back to the original form is necessarily a forward step. I'm not detracting from Steve's wonderful work with the DAC - he certainly has taken it to new heights, and put it into the spotlight.
The one in the pic looks like a pretty early one which means I may have actually built it before the aforementioned mods took place, but happy to be corrected.
Enjoy.
Would you mind also posting pictures of a current stock assembled version of your boards into a dac, so we can see what your current design looks like in assembled form.
It would be great if this information was shared in a dedicated thread under "other dacs". Cheers.