ok! everything works! i just build this and it sounds very very good ! i used 1n60 for D2-D5 , 2n5457 for Q1 & Q2 and for Q3 - Q7 mpsa06 with hfe 144-160. This is verified for me! Thank you again for your great work!
Currently on a quest to find some dirt with a clean blend that I can run some 808-style drum machine kick/hats/snare through that gives them some nasty harmonics to mix in with the straight signal. I'm probably going to build this and the Dunwich/GCI modded ODB-3 (that has WAY too many knobs and switches) and report back. I should probably just leave my drum tone as is but the fuzz is calling and I can't seem to ignore it... 🤦
why not just build a blend , this way you can add any effect and experiment ? (https://effectslayouts.blogspot.com/2015/12/split-n-blend.html https://tagboardeffects.blogspot.com/2012/02/split-n-blend.html)
Thanks for the suggestions, Magus - I've had some mixed results in the past with slapping blend circuits onto existing effects. I've yet to find a "one size fits all" solution. I think that you kind of have to tailor the blend to the circuit itself. Which is why I want to give this and the Dunwich layout a try - I'm hoping that the blends in these don't limit gain or bass frequencies - which has definitely been an issue in some of the stuff I've tried.
i meant building a standalone blend and test your existing builds with it so you can narrow down your search, there's a lot of circuits to choose from. i tend to use also a lpb1together with a blend to make up for any volume loss. that odb3 layout seems to be still unverified btw hope you can make it work, dunwich layouts are not the easiest to do but very rewarding when they work!
ok! everything works! i just build this and it sounds very very good !
ReplyDeletei used 1n60 for D2-D5 , 2n5457 for Q1 & Q2 and for Q3 - Q7 mpsa06 with hfe 144-160. This is verified for me! Thank you again for your great work!
Awesome!
DeleteThanks for verifying!
Currently on a quest to find some dirt with a clean blend that I can run some 808-style drum machine kick/hats/snare through that gives them some nasty harmonics to mix in with the straight signal. I'm probably going to build this and the Dunwich/GCI modded ODB-3 (that has WAY too many knobs and switches) and report back. I should probably just leave my drum tone as is but the fuzz is calling and I can't seem to ignore it... 🤦
Deletewhy not just build a blend , this way you can add any effect and experiment ? (https://effectslayouts.blogspot.com/2015/12/split-n-blend.html https://tagboardeffects.blogspot.com/2012/02/split-n-blend.html)
Deletemaybe this is also fun with drums ? https://tagboardeffects.blogspot.com/2012/07/seamoon-funk-machine-v2-with-blender.html
DeleteThanks for the suggestions, Magus - I've had some mixed results in the past with slapping blend circuits onto existing effects. I've yet to find a "one size fits all" solution. I think that you kind of have to tailor the blend to the circuit itself. Which is why I want to give this and the Dunwich layout a try - I'm hoping that the blends in these don't limit gain or bass frequencies - which has definitely been an issue in some of the stuff I've tried.
Deletei meant building a standalone blend and test your existing builds with it so you can narrow down your search, there's a lot of circuits to choose from. i tend to use also a lpb1together with a blend to make up for any volume loss. that odb3 layout seems to be still unverified btw hope you can make it work, dunwich layouts are not the easiest to do but very rewarding when they work!
Delete