Edit: its quite bad now, loud enough to maybe damage the speaker
this is a new one on me. It was on all day on fire up day no problem.
Anyone?
M
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That sounds right, and the net effect will depend on the pot settings. You can do a simple resistance check from the bottom of the treble to the top of the bass, and from the top of the bass to its wiper. You should see zero ohms for both in normal, and something much bigger (depending on settings) in PAB.norburybrook wrote: ↑Thu Nov 14, 2019 1:30 pm:Edit, its definitely working OK , I'm hearing the bottom end drop and level change today. perhaps my ears were tired the other day.
Sorted....norburybrook wrote: ↑Thu Nov 14, 2019 3:43 pm hmm a few cracking intermittent issues to sort out today....the OT secondaries are crackling when chopsticked.....is that normal?
Edit: its quite bad now, loud enough to maybe damage the speakerpressing on the OT Ht and secondaries (4-8-16) wires is where the noise is coming from. The connections at the switch are fine though and individually they're silent when chop sticked, pressing on the twisted together wires makes the noise come and go. Its not volume dependant so I presume nothing to do with the pre amp stages.
this is a new one on me. It was on all day on fire up day no problem.
Anyone?
M
Marcusnorburybrook wrote: ↑Thu Nov 14, 2019 3:01 pmTony,talbany wrote: ↑Wed Nov 13, 2019 6:36 am Marus
Glad everything fired up ok
Let's do a real testWith the loop jumped out with a patch cord only the master all the way up send set at noon and the return set at noon. At those noise levels could you play a show or would everyone be looking over at you?
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Also at those settings is it at all buzzy or do you just hear just a little hiss in the background?
Curious as to what you found!
Just done this test, it's fine noise wise,I'm testing in a quiet studio and there's some hiss like you'd expecton stage no one would notice.
M
I think I'm going to end up with a one pickup telecaster and or a Les paul Junior and ONE AMPLIFIER......
Spoke to Cliff and he saidmartin manning wrote: ↑Wed Nov 13, 2019 11:29 amI'm curious as to how this turns out too.norburybrook wrote: ↑Wed Nov 13, 2019 9:54 amneed to wait until next thursday before I can get my speaker in the Cab and see how that is so perhaps Erwin's board may be here by then and I can see if my 9v experiment to the footswitch works. That 'could' add grounding issues I think. I got the idea From Clifff Brown at 633 engineering here in the UK he does that with his amps.
So there is precident for this system you are trying? Got any links describing the Cliff Brown system?
) I would suggest you use a ground free floating power supply for your pedals.
A floating supply could be done with an isolated DC-DC converter inside the foot switch enclosure. That would require a small board with a converter module and a half-dozen other parts.norburybrook wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2019 11:21 amSpoke to Cliff and he said) I would suggest you use a ground free floating power supply for your pedals.
He wouldn't expand on that![]()
When I did my last one with the 9v on the amp, the pedal was in front of the amp so it was wired ground free and the ground came from the jack/guitar. This is on a loop so it would ground with the loop jack ground, no?
thanks Martin. Waiting for Erwins board so I can actually get 9v to the pedalmartin manning wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2019 12:36 pmA floating supply could be done with an isolated DC-DC converter inside the foot switch enclosure. That would require a small board with a converter module and a half-dozen other parts.norburybrook wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2019 11:21 amSpoke to Cliff and he said) I would suggest you use a ground free floating power supply for your pedals.
He wouldn't expand on that![]()
When I did my last one with the 9v on the amp, the pedal was in front of the amp so it was wired ground free and the ground came from the jack/guitar. This is on a loop so it would ground with the loop jack ground, no?
Since the pedal signal ground is common with its power supply ground, wherever the power supply is grounded becomes another signal ground in the loop. I would try it as it is, and see what happens. If it's noisy, then you can try the DC-DC converter approach, which is pretty simple and cheap. I would consider replacing the 9V regulator and send 12V to the foot switch for that.
exactly Martin.martin manning wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2019 4:47 pm Nice! So what you have now is like this? And, quick work on the doubler board ;^)
Maybe a tiny bit quieter, not much in it really.martin manning wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2019 5:55 pm What happens if you power the pedal from a 9V adapter? Is it quiet then?
The Clean and OD masters determine the input level to the send buffer, and they are independent. You can set those low or high depending upon how hard you want to drive the CF, and differentially to balance clean and OD. Assuming 10% taper master pots, I'd start with both around noon, and lower one of them to balance the Clean and OD.norburybrook wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2019 6:01 pm...can you tell me what order the gain controls are?
We have input volume...then a loop send volume and loop return volume and a master volume. there's so many possibilities to add gain in this chain I'm not 100% sure what's driving what.
I don't have a bypass switch so don't have a ball park level setting.