Saturday 21 December 2013

Unicord/Univox Super-Fuzz

A friend of mine was wondering about Malekko mini boxed fuzz and forums told us that the unit was apparently just Univox Super-Fuzz clone in A-box. With our favourite methods, there is not a snowball's chance in hell to fit this in A. There's already Mark's original layout in the library, but i redrew this so it can be fitted in 1590B box instead of BB.

This layout is per the factory schematic found on Univox.org. I swapped the transistor pinouts for modern ones so that 2N5088, 2N5089, MPSA18 and similar can be used. There's added anti-popping pull-down resistor at the input and a polarity protection for your convenience.

Layout is now fixed and verified. Happy building everyone!

Gearmandude's old demo vid:



90 comments:

  1. > 50 components ..... lazyness rules my world today :P John, would you be so kind to do one of your false verifications? :P

    Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm on it. I think i found one error already...
      So. Do not start yet...
      +m

      Delete
    2. Just in time :P I was ready tio mark the holes. Waiting for your comments!

      Delete
    3. It is sort-of safe to build. If you started, then just save to original file. The upper lead of the trimmer is going to supply row and not to ground as it should be. So just bend the trimmer leg and you'll be fine. I'll do the fix on my board and see if it works otherwise. Will be hell to fix :)
      +m

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    4. Yup. If you take the top lead of the trimmer one row lower - it'll work and sound right.

      Now i need to figure out how to fix the layout :)
      +m

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    5. Yeah, this will mean 21x21... I'll do just the bending :P

      Well, i'll do the holes now, and after dinner I'll get an iron session

      Delete
    6. Nope :) I got it to stay at 21x20. Just needed 2 more cuts and 2 more links. Quite an elegant fix i might add :P
      +m

      Delete
  2. I was immediately thinking "oh hell yes, I'm gonna start doing this right away" :D
    I'll wait for you to finish up and hit us with possible fixes :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Sorry for all the hazzle. Now it's finally correct. If the file you have doesn't have "24 cuts, 8 links" on it, then it's the older one with errors.

    Damn this sounds cool. Like very high gain distortion/fuzz hybrid with sick up octave overtones. The trimmer does change the overall tone, but not enough that i would take it outside. All the controls work well and the tone changes a lot with every single change to the settings. Great fuzz.
    +m
    +m

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So can we consider it as unverified, I suppose?

      Delete
    2. ...Log pot for expander could be a nice thing to try...
      +m

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    3. Javi. Yes. Until someone builds one with the fix :) I'm quite certain that the current layout works, but i'll still wait for someone to build it as it is now.

      Damn it sounds good. Probably the tightest fuzz i've ever played with. Not much noise content either.
      +m

      Delete
    4. Ok, I'll build the corrected layout, just hat to ad two cuts :P

      This evening I suppoe I'll be able to unverify this one, have extra work this afternoon as santa's elf :P

      Delete
    5. You'll rule as an elf!!!!
      +m

      Delete
    6. By the way, no doubt that the dodgy cap, was the 10th one to be swapped,

      Luckily, Murphy and his law was nor present yesterday and I was able to get the Spongebob's Pineapple House after just a two hours pilgrimage in Madrid downtown, so, my job as Santa's elf was a success too!

      Delete
  4. Nice! I'm gonna build this thing up some time after the christmas holidays. Thanks a bunch for the layout.

    ReplyDelete
  5. This schematic with all parts is sitting on my desk for over 3 months. Maybe this is a good time to start building it as it is now in a tighter layout. I have such high expectations from this one.
    Tony Mcphee's Ground Hogs played through this baby on Split and other great albums. The sound is just so crazy that I had to try it out.
    I have to meditate for 3 days before diving into circuits this size.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Nice work, I am going to place an order for some pedals and will order up parts for this one too...
    Having a Superfuzz inside a 1950B is awesome! Great work mirosol!
    Waiting on JaviCAP's verification :)
    (I keep telling my self, no more fuzzes~!)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm fairly confident about the layout at the moment, so it should be safe to build. But i think Javi will get it done way before your order arrives :)
      +m

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    2. One last thing to add to my sound description - With the filter on (the tone switch, i mean) it has some qualities that remind me of Boss MT-2 Metal Zone :P It surely does not sound like a Metal Zone, but there is something quite similar in there.
      +m

      Delete
  7. Excellent layout Miro! I built the other one posted here and it is awesome. This layout looks even better (no offense, Mark)

    Any chance we can get a bill of materials for this motha?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Just built and I'm gettin problems. Ultra flarted sound, and extremely low voltage on Q1 collector. Just checkin the schematics, 2,2nf cap sohould go from q1c and q2 base to +9, not to ground as appears on the layout, but solves nothing anyway, I'll keep on checkin'

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You're correct on this one. Posted the fix.
      +m

      Delete
  9. Well, I'd say: Tag it!

    But have to tell that in my build, even thought it sounds goos, pots are responsive, and so on, I'm afraid that I have a dodgy cap, as when y play, sometimes sound comes and goes, let's say: sound gets faded slowly and comes back after a few seconds.

    I checked all trannies, all resistors values and are correct... but sadly this build takes 12 f*cking electrolithics, it's going to be a hard time catching the dodgy one :(

    Anyway, when it sounds, the effect is great, realy wild fuzz, hope to get this damned cap soon.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Man if it was not for the price... I would slap twelve 10uF MLCC TDK caps but not at 48 cents each! lol
    Hope you can find the dodgy cap!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I bought 60 x 10uF multilayer ceramic caps a while ago for not a lot of money but the seller doesn't seem to have any left. But if anyone does prefer the idea of using mlc caps instead of electros then this is a great kit.

      http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/111022072323

      £6.65 delivered and contains 20 of each, 1u, 2u2, 4u7 and 10u, plus 520 extras as a bonus in lower values

      Delete
    2. I used tantalums on mine. Except for the power filter, which is standard aluminium.
      +m

      Delete
  11. Well, my probem is isolated, but still have not found the cure :P

    Had to get my hands on the signal injector, luckiliy is just on very rare situations that I need to use it. Well, from Q2 to the end of the circuit the sound is ok, you get the different changes in tone from q to q, the trim does the work and so on.

    But when you inject signal on Q1 collector, the sound fades and the effect gets no sound, when you take the injector apart, the sound comes back, so, the problem must be on parts. Leaving Q1 socket empty, and injectin signal on the holes, the sound is not cut.

    One more thing that I have seen is that when you get voltages, on Q 1 collector, the voltage slowly rises until half a volt more than the initial measurement, from 4,7 to 5.18 (battery 8,95 volts).

    Quite a weird behaviour, will have to check later. If you have any hint, is more than welcome :P

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's getting difficult to finish this board.The problem is still the same: fading and gone sound. Another shit I've found:

      Q4 and Q5: Collector should bias about ~3,1v. If you put only Q4 on the board, collector is correctly biased at 3,18v. As soon as you insert Q5, the bias for both trannies, get down to 1,4v. If only Q5 is placed, it goes too to 1,4v. Never had this problem before: 10k resistor from +9v for both collectors and same row, and getting different voltages depending if you put one or two trannies.

      Let's keep on trying.

      Delete
    2. Definetely, you have to change the layout Miro, it doesn't work for me, so it must be wrong, just redo it....

      So, defintelely VERIFIED :P Sounds like a charm, really exciting fuzz. I've listened many supposed "high gain distortions" that look like a TS8 compared with this Superfuzz.

      My recommendation: try with 2N3904, this circuit likes lower hfe trannies. 2n5088 sound great but prefer the 3904. MPSA18 is absolutely overkill.

      I've tried some BA243, silicon with very low voltage drop od about 5,5-5,8 volts (higher than germanium, but lower than usual silicon), and the work quite well.

      This one will get boxed as soon as my enclosures order comes here (let's hope this week :P)

      Great work Miro, a Superfuzz in a 1590B is really great. Sorry but no way to get it inside a 1590A :P

      Delete
  12. 2N2222 should be perfect for this circuit!

    ReplyDelete
  13. I built one of these using IvIark's earlier posted WIDE layout with all NOS 2SC828 transistors. I modded mine with a scoop control and a frequency select for the mid scoop freq. it sounds great! i had to use a 1590BB enclosure with the wider vero (but I don't mind that a bit).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi John, seems like I am following you around and now the Univox Super fuzz. Any way of getting your verified layout with the scoop control and a freq. select? I think we are on the same trail of great vintage fuzzes with authentic transistors but with added functionality

      Delete
  14. it's been awhile since I built and modded it so i'd have to tear it apart to see what I did. I just did it on the fly and didn't make any notes about the mods.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Hi, I've just finished this one and get the same problem as Javi - really low volume, farted fuzz sound. I think I am working off the changed layout but just to be sure can you tell me what was changed so I can check? Cheers!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey Jack, I had two problems:

      -Flarty sound and low otput: A bad solder on Q1. After fixing the solder, I had the second problem.

      - The sound did fade and come back when playing, it had to be a dodgy electrollihtic, so I starded to swap'em one by one..... of course, it was the 10th cap the one faulty :P

      After these fixes, the Superfuzz sound really loud and powerful, a really nasty (in the good sense) fuzz, in fact, has become one of my favourites!

      Delete
    2. Thanks mate I'll check the soldering again, everything works (pots/trimmer etc) but the output is just really low. Cant wait to get this one sorted :)

      Delete
    3. Got it done, was missing one of the 10uf caps. Schoolboy error! Sounds amazing, my favourite fuzz so far!

      Delete
    4. Tell me that it was the one from Q5 (lower left corner) and I''ll give a loud LOL, this was the dodgy one on my build :P

      BR

      Delete
  16. I want to build one but i have some questions (i dont have so much experience building pedals, big muff pi is the hardest board i built). Please help!
    The white 10k square component is a 10k trimpot? this one should work? http://www.banzaimusic.com/Trimpot-T93-YB-10k.html
    If yes, do i need a special machine to adjust ¿bias?? or i have to adjust it on-the-fly (pedal turned on and adjusting the screw until it sounds ok)?
    Is this bill of materials ok?
    RESISTORS
    6 X 100k
    7 X 10k
    2 X 1.8k
    220k
    4 X 22k
    3 X 47K
    1M
    3.3K
    470K
    2 X 470 OHM
    15K
    1K

    POLARIZED CAPS
    12 X 10UF

    NONPOLARIZED CAPS
    2.2NF
    2 X 100NF
    1NF

    DIODES
    2 X 1N4148
    1N5817

    TRANSISTORS
    6 X 2N5088

    POTS
    2 X 50K LIN
    SPDT ON-ON

    1 Trimpot 10k

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No I wouldn't use that trimmer. It's multi-turn and would be a pain to use for something like this, and it also doesn't have the correct pitch for the position in the layout. You need a trimmer that is 5mm between outer pins, and 5mm from outer pins to wiper to fit in with Miro's layout, so I would suggest getting this one which would be perfect:

      http://www.banzaimusic.com/PT6-horizontal-10k.html

      The bill of materials looks ok but I would strongly recommend getting at least one spare of every value (preferably more than one spare). You will be very annoyed if you buy the exact quantity you need and then damage a components during soldering and have to go and buy more to finish the project.

      Also consider getting some of these:

      http://www.banzaimusic.com/SIL-20-pins.html

      which you can use to socket the transistors.

      Delete
    2. Thanks for the help! Just a few more noob questions, which kind of resistors should i use, carbon film, metal film, carbon composite...?
      Are this capacitors ok? http://www.banzaimusic.com/10uF-35V-Radial.html
      http://www.banzaimusic.com/Xicon-Greenies-0-0022uF.html
      http://www.banzaimusic.com/WIMA-MKS4-100nF-250V-LS7-5.html
      http://www.banzaimusic.com/Orange-Drop-715-0-001uF.html
      Thanks!

      Delete
    3. Camp. you can use any of the 3, the difference is the material they are made of, which alters the % variance. Personally I would suggest metal film, and carbon film if the value you need can not be found as metal film. Metal film usually help prevent a lot of outside noise and are very reliable when it comes the the values, ie: if something is marked as a 10k it will be no lower then 9k and no higher then 11k. There are a lot of people that argue over whether or not specific materials used to made specific parts affects the sound, but I have not found much of a difference, if any in the material for resistors and capacitors.

      The greenies, and electrolytic caps are fine, and I would avoid the other two. I've build tons of pedals with cheap greenies and they sound fine, the issue is the height and width of them when they are large values. You have to remember that depending on the size of the enclosure, and closeness of the parts in the circuit you have to be wary of capacitor sizes.

      Also, as long as the voltage rating for the components is above the voltage powering the circuit you will be fine. Most of my electrolytics are rated at 50V, and I have a lot at 35V, to help keep the size of them down.

      I would post some sources of parts, but I'm in the US and not sure if they would help where you're at. Also, look on the DIY stompbox forum, there is a ton of info there on beginning building, and check the forum here. I have learned so much just by reading others posts, and don't be afraid to ask questions. There are some many guys here that are ready to help and provide direction. I know without many of the guys here, I would not know what I do, and would not be able to do what I've done. I don't want to name names, cause I know I will forget someone and don't want to seem ungrateful.

      Delete
    4. Thanks so much for the help, im going to buy the parts this week. Im going to use ceramic capacitors instead of the greenies and the other two, they are 2,5mm wide so it will fit perfect on he perfboard

      Delete
  17. This thing rocks man. My favorite fuzz yet, I always wanted a superfuzz. I used 4 bc109's a 2n5088 and a bc550. Im happy all my electrolytics were good.

    ReplyDelete
  18. This is a great layout and adds the 10k trimmer for controlling the octave fuzz. Any chance of adding the extra modified layout which adds on top of the octave control trimmer the Tone and Clipping mods?
    1. Tone control knob instead of the switch
    2. diode clipping switch and trimmer control.

    Thanks guys

    ReplyDelete
  19. what does that blue dot mean?
    is that the point where the double link is?
    i just want to get sure before i spend hours of searching for failures. :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yup. That's where there are two links in one hole.
      +m

      Delete
  20. Don't know why but the Q4 Q5 issue really got on my "internal strings".
    The pedal sounds amazing without Q5 and when I insert it back in it starts giving that octave sound. The problem is that the pedal actually sounds better without the octave thing.
    The octave makes it a bit gated and chords are too squashed and the overtones are so strong that you really get all sorts of harmonics that are a bit annoying.

    I'm thinking of adding a switch for Q5 (or Q4 it doesn't matter).
    I also added the 10k pot betweeen Q4 and Q5 and matching them didn't help.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Q4 and Q5 are crucial. Correct biasing will get you that great octave up thing, but chords will sound too harmonically rich for me. I used a 10k trimmer between them to match them better as suggested by several DIY veterans.

    Btw, it's OK to make money building pedals. Getting parts, etching the PCB, enclosure, pots, knobs, good true bypass wiring, artwork and support is something that costs money. We all know how much money and time we spend on building them pedals.
    It's OK to charge a reasonable amount for a good clone or a good sounding pedal. It's OK to overcharge for something which nobody else has. ha ha...It's NOT OK to charge a shitload of cash for an unoriginal simple circuit that goes bzzzzzzz.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Hi,

    I'm currently troubleshooting a failed build of one these and was hoping for some tips if poss!

    When using an audio probe, I get sound from the input up until the base terminal on the first 2N5088, but nothing from the collector or emitter. Should I expect to hear something at these terminals with the probe too? If so then I can probably assume this transistor needs replaced.

    I'm not sure what the convention is for transistors, but assuming they were numbered Q1-Q6 going from top-to-bottom, left-to-right the readings are:

    Q1 (the one I mentioned above): e:0v b:0v: c:8.3v
    Q2: e:1.31v b:1.91v c:1.41v
    Q3: e:8.01v b:8.24v c:8.7v
    Q4: e:1.9v b:2.88v c:3.2v
    Q5: e:1.3v b:1.52v c:1.40v
    Q6: e:0.51v b:1.08v c:3.50v

    The trimmer (1-2-3 : left-to-right)
    Fully anticlockwise
    1: 0v
    2: 0v
    3: 0.55v
    Fully clockwise
    1: 0.55v
    2: 0v
    3: 0v

    Any suggestions on how to proceed gratefully received! All measurements from the above were taken with no input signal being applied to the circuit (I'm not sure if this is the correct way to do things however).

    Many thanks,

    Eddie

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. ps. With the "Expander" pot turned fully anticlockwise and the Balance pot turned fully clockwise, the circuit appears to pick up radio signals. I am testing using a Ruby guitar headphone amplifier which I've never heard radio through before.

      Delete
    2. OK, I slept on it, studied my own words carefully and got a hold of the original Univox schematic. After working backwards from the suspect transistor I found that the 47K and 470K each had one of their terminals in the wrong position.

      After fixing them, all is well! Sounds amazing - even using my <100GBP strat through a headphone amplifier.

      Delete
    3. That's the spirit dude. The pedal is amazing and a 100GBP guitar will sound just as good as a 1000 GBP one. Remember that great guitarists became famous before they became rich. (;

      Delete
  23. Built this almost 4 years ago, besides the hum that it had (never got to fix that), it sounded...awesome. Here are some samples in every mode

    The .ogg samples here: http://forums.rgc.ro/topic/54003-univox-superfuzz/?p=524597

    ReplyDelete
  24. I built this today, sounds badass! I'm not sure but I think D3 (polarity protection) is supposed to be connected to ground. Thanks for the sweet layouts!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nope. That would be the case if the protection was wired as parallel diode protection. We have a tendency of either omitting the protection altogether or swapping it for series protection. With parallel protection (anode to ground, cathode to supply) the reversed polarity will burn the protection up and in most cases short the circuit up until fixed. In same cases the diode may blow up, burning a a chunk of the board useless with it. With series protection, the only caveat is the 0,2-0,5 Volt voltage drop, which will have inaudible effect on the circuit. But once this protection receives the wrong polarity, the circuit won't simply work. At all. Nothing burns up or gets shorted. So, if a polarity protection is added or used in our layouts, the chances are this is done with series protection (supply to anode and cathode to circuit +V line). Like in this case.
      +m

      Delete
    2. Oh, thanks for the detailed reply, I learned something new today. I'm about to box this thing up :-)

      Delete
  25. Finally i built this pedal and its sounds cool but, its normal that the sound is gated? especially the first strings... and touching the trimmer there is a big angle where the octaves sounds even if im not playing, its that normal too? :S (sorry for my english)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nervermind, one bad transistor. Now it sound amazing!

      Delete
  26. I built one of these... FINALLY LOL
    Fired up on the first try and this thing really does nail Townshend Live at Leeds stuff in spades...
    I ended up using OA1160 diodes both with fv of 32 and 2N3904's for the transistors.
    I ended up noodling around for a long time before I finished boxing it up cause it sounded so good LOL
    Some pix!
    http://i145.photobucket.com/albums/r233/jimijam_photos/7d3ffd88b7b826901335a646b67ea91a.jpg~original
    and the guts...
    http://i145.photobucket.com/albums/r233/jimijam_photos/f0cfb70dbdebe07ec9e9e39107a632fa.jpg~original
    Not one of my cleanest build but the bottom line. It WORKS.
    Thanks mirsol for the layout

    ReplyDelete
  27. How do you wire the tone switch up?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. on the layout you have 3 wires that say sw1,sw2,sw3. you take those and you wire them on the tone switch.

      Delete
  28. Hi Guys, excellent job with this site. Done this recently but im having problems-
    I used 2n3904 transistores. The problem is the bypass works fine but when engaged the effect it drops the volume to almost no audible. I measure the transistor and gave me this, hope u can help me!!
    C B E
    Q1 5,51 0,7 0,12
    Q2 1,48 1,96 1,32
    Q3 8,76 5,51 4,88
    Q4 5,94 3,4 2,82
    Q5 1,48 1,67 1,33
    Q6 3,97 1,11 0,48

    Any suggestions??

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. By the way i numbered the Transistor left to right being Q1 near 2,2nF and Q6 the in top right corner near the balance wires!!

      Delete
  29. Hi Everyone!
    I built this fuzz as my first project ever. I have the problem that seems to be common to some other users. Once effect is engaged the output level drops significantly and only cranking up the amp to max makes this effect output signal audible. I did lot of troubleshooting f.ex. replace electrolitic caps, replace transistors but problem still persists.
    I would be appreciated for any ideas.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Triple check your germainuim diodes. If those leak too much the cause could be there. You could probe them at the right hand side, fourth row from the bottom. I've replaced those for standard 1N4148 in my builds and it's my main lead pedal. May not be all that loud, but still clearly way over unity with modern high(ish) gain pickups.
      +m

      Delete
    2. In a sense, if your signal is loud as F at the two bottom transistor's collectors, but not at the Ge diodes bottom leads, then your issue is with those diodes dropping too much of the signal to ground and thus - lowering the output level too much.
      +m

      Delete
    3. Big thanks Mirosol for Your reply!. I will check all diodes as You wrote. Thx again!

      Delete
    4. Mirosol, I have one more question: how this effect should be loud in terms of comparison to bypassed signal. Should it be approx the same loud as bypassed signal (clean from guitar thru bypass in effect up to amp)? Thx

      Delete
    5. Louder. "May not be all that loud, but still clearly way over unity with modern high(ish) gain pickups".
      +m

      Delete
  30. Finally I fixed the issue with low output. I replaced all transistors, capacitors (electrolic + foil) and diodes without success. Than I measured resistance of balance pot and it was damaged. Despite of pot turning it has always one resistance out of pot range (pot is rated 0-50kOhm whereas its resistance was about 400kOhm) After replacement the effect behaves perfectly. Nice lovely sharp fuzz sound.
    Thanks Mirosol for Your support.
    I appreciate a lot the support available on this site - impressing!!!

    ReplyDelete
  31. Finished this yesterday, worked like a charm. I used 2N5088's Q4 and Q5 matched at 595 HFE and 1N60 germanium diodes and it really sounded good, nice octave. It has a much higher gain than a kit I got from General Guitar Gadgets (first pedal I ever built) which used 2N2222's. Thanks for the layout!

    ReplyDelete
  32. Quick question. I am getting ready to have a go at this and I have a bunch of 10uf non polarized greenies can I use them in this build or should i stick to using the 10uf electrolytics?

    ReplyDelete
  33. I've never seen "greenies" in 10uf. If they do exist, they are probably way too large to use with any layout on this site. I would use small electrolytic caps, or monolithic ceramic

    ReplyDelete
  34. great leyout! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ss6uMi17_To

    ReplyDelete
  35. Built this like 6 months ago and finally boxed it today. I just KNEW it wouldn't fire up--I have a pretty bad track record with boarda this big.

    IT'S ALIVE! Sounds just rrrrrripping with 2n3904s, so I can't wait to mess with other transistors.
    You did it again, guys!!!

    ReplyDelete
  36. really low output and farted sound... that is my first pedal so i must have fked up somewhere... gonna check... anyone that had this problem fixed it?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. it was a bad potentiometer. the balance one. great pedal! thankssssssss!

      Delete
  37. Quick comment for anyone else stuck with issues. This one nearly caught me out. Make sure you have your trimmer legs soldered into the correct rails. The spacing of many trimmers will mean they stretch across 4 rails. You'll notice on this layout, its only supposed to stretch across 3 rails. Hope that makes sense!

    ReplyDelete
  38. I see people referring to Q4 &Q5 being balanced. Can someone tell me which two transistors those are on this layout?

    ReplyDelete
  39. Hey there, loving this site. Thanks for all your work. I've built about six pedals, super happy with them all.

    One question. This pedal, the schematic shows SW3 going to 47k and 10k to ground. In this layout the 10k isn't going to ground. Is there something I'm missing, or is this a mistake? Or is the schematic I'm comparing this to wrong?

    I know this is an older layout, but if anyone sees this I'd love to know. I'm going to try wiring the 10k to ground either way.

    Thanks again. Just an amazing resource.

    ReplyDelete
  40. I wrote a big thing that got lost, but to recap: love.the site, thanks for all your work.

    I was comparing this layout to a schematic I found and I found a discrepancy. SW3 is supposed to go to 47k and then also 10k to ground, but in the layout it doesn't look like the 10k goes to ground. Am I missing something? I fully admit that I might be, I'm pretty new at this. Also I might just be looking at a different schematic than the one used to make the layout.

    Thanks for all your work.

    ReplyDelete
  41. Hi there. Sorry for this rookie question, but I can't figure out, if there should be a 3PDT-switch to turn on the pedal? And where should I put it?
    And I'm getting quite confused with the in and out-part ... there's only on wire for each? How do you solder that to a jack?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. hey man. all offboard wiring is the same for true bypass. you can find it above under the tab labeled "offboard."

      https://tagboardeffects.blogspot.com/2012/02/offboard-wiring.html

      Delete
    2. Thanks man! That was actually kind of obvious when I think about it ...
      I think my brain stopped working for a while, since I asked ;-P

      Delete
  42. Hello everybody! very good fuzz but i have a problem. Very loud background noise. Have you had this? how to solve the problem? The power supply is good

    ReplyDelete
  43. Hi, folks! Built it, played with it for a while, no problems with the build, sounds great, but I have some questions:

    1) How can I increase output level?
    In my case, output transistor has almost no effect on the output level, played with standard 2222, 5088, 3904, etc., the difference is small.

    Diodes have much bigger influence:
    - LED (1200+ mV) rapes amplifier with loudness, and it’s definitely not a fuzz, more like power-amp dist.
    - 4148 (650 mv) is ok, but they sounds pretty ear-piercing, and I want germanium flavor, with soft highs.
    - germanium diodes that I have (250-300 mV) sounds so quiet that even with the output pot at max, a booster is needed to get to unity.
    I'm thinking bout 2 germanium diodes in series for each of two sockets to reach 4148 voltage, but right now i have only 2 germ diodes, so can`t test this, but it might work.

    What are your opinions and ideas on this?

    2) Taming high frequencies.
    I haven’t found a single solution for tone adjusting, except for a complex 2-band equalizer like Behringer Superfuzz SF300.
    All "tone" mods that I've seen are about adjusting scoop at 1 kHz, and there is nothing about cutting everything beyond 3(?) kHz.
    So far I have only learned two ways: I can increase value of the 2.2nF cap(near the input wire), or/and put cap from output to ground.
    In this case, the maximum that can be done is to connect capacitors on a rotary or toggle switch, and get 2-4 “presets” for highs.

    So, how else can this circuit be modified to achieve tone adjustment as we typically understand it?

    Thanks!

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