Thanks!Yes, very nice, now I definitely want one. Rather than keep waiting on the Aussie distributor to get them in (& pay their high price) I think I'll do a Vero board one with switchable assymetrical clipping. Cheers
That is the clip that keeps giving - very nice!!Here's a sample I did when I swapped pickups on one of my SGs. All distortion is the ggg pedal...the outro lead is the new neck pickup with the pedal engaged as it was in the song, but guitar volume is rolled back.
https://soundcloud.com/thatbastarddon/buffalo-pickup-swap-wav
Two birds, one stone, and all that...thanks again.That is the clip that keeps giving - very nice!!
(these are the ones I just scored).
Cool, always feels good to inspire someone. CheersThis thread, and Ivan, as usual, is getting my pedal build / mod GAS going......
Wow, that is a dense synopsis. There is a lot more to pedals than meets the eye!!As I'm putting one together, I've done a bit of research into on stompbox forums. General consensus on the LM308 vs OP07DP chips seems to be that the OP07DP is more aggressive but thinner sounding with the LM308 also sounding a bit tighter. The OP07DP equipped units use a 27pf compensating cap where as the LM308 equipped units used a 33pf cap originally, later units a 30pf which some think has a bit to do with the OP07DP's thinner sound, along with this chip also having a faster slew rate than the LM308. Suggested fix is to increase the value of the OP07DP's compensating cap (ceramic disk cap) from 27pf to up around 100 - 150pf to get them sounding the same as the original chip, though how it sounds is a personal preference thing & opinion seems equally divided as to what sounds best. Germanium diodes have a much lower forward voltage drop than silicon so clip the wave form more (hence lower volume) but clip with rounded off edges kinda thing, rather than the abrupt, sharp edges clipping of silicon devices so the clipping is "softer" somewhat, even though they are set up as hard clippers in the rat. A popular mod (like the BYOC mouse) is to add switchable (soft) clippers into the feedback circiut (tube screamer style), the hard clippers being switch out when these are in use. This gives "overdrive" rather than distortion, making for a versatile pedal. Another thing I picked up on stompbox forums is that some people experience squealing at extreme settings with Vero board builds so I'll do mine "point to point" on prototype board to avoid this problem. Cheers
Wow, that is a dense synopsis. There is a lot more to pedals than meets the eye!!
Yes, in many cases there is a lot more than meets the eye. Some very talented designers out there, as well as some very talented tinkerers' who spend a lot of time & effort to improve pedals, Fred Briggs comes to mind. The Super OCD I built to his spec is a very good overdrive/distortion. There's also some very knowledgeable people who analyze the circuit functions of fx & give the knowledge to the masses, like RG Keen & Jack Orman. A few "booteeker's" also contrived to stompbox forums. Analogman is a regular contributor, amongst others. Cheers
No, not crazy, apparently the differences are "subtle"& as many prefer the OP07DP as do the LM308. Of note, the YDR has only ever used the OP07DP & later variants with the LM308 use a Texas Instruments unit instead of Motorola. I've never owned one but according to people that have owned several, its hard to find two that sound exactly alike (though all have the "rat" sound) due mostly to the less than ideal filter design. They use low value resistors (47r & 560r) & high value electrolytic caps (2u2 & 4u7) for the high & low frequency dumps. Electrolytics can have as much as 20% tolerance. A better approach would be high value resistor's & low value film caps to get the same frequency response & tighter tolerances. Electrolytics are also used in two points of the audio path. I plan to use close tolerance tantalum's in place of the electrolytics. These will be the only changes I make. I like to research pedals before building, just so I know what makes it tick. CheersHeck yeah man! Personally I can't hear a great deal of difference between the LM308 and the TI chip. Maybe I'm crazy but I feel the TI sounds cleaner.