Sounds more like a pot on the base pin bias to cause the transistor to go unbiased so that noise voltages didn't turn the part on. Let me think for a bit on how that could be done.Doog wrote:Yeah, that! Farting and burping!PenPen wrote:
"Gate" means that it only allows a certain portion of the signal through. Sometimes, if you are building a pedal and misbias a gain stage, you will get what is called "gating", where only certain voltage swings come through. AKA "farting" or "burping".
The gate control on the Ultra Fuzz I used to have (similar to the Fuzz Factory) could be set so it'd kill hum/noise when you're not playing. Crank it too high, and it just attenuated the volume.. but in the middle, you got some great squelchy stuff happening, with spluttering sustain as the note died off..
THAT'S what I'm after.
Gate pedal?
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- SickenedEmotions99
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I'm fully aware of what a Noise Gate does. I tried all of my guitars, on any setting I could think of. So I know I'm not just an idiot. I would think that trying it with 4 different guitars, all with very different pickups, would be a worthy experiment. With the threshold turned up high, it cancelled all the hum, but it killed the tone. Even with the threshold about 1/3 of the way up, it still killed the tone, sustain, and didn't do a damn thing about the hum. I have a high gain amp, and use alot of distortion/fuzz, so I figured it'd help. It didn't. I've also read a bunch of reviews from guys with the exact same problem. So it's not just me.PenPen wrote:Sickened, did you read WTF I wrote and understand what a noise gate does? You had the threshold too high, the decay of your notes went under threshold, and it shut the signal down. Exactly what it is supposed to do. Also, you normally don't want to have a noise gate running ALL the time.
The MXR Gate supposedly has a really smooth on/off, sounding more "natural" was what I'd read in reviews of it. Now, granted that was a DIY build of the original, so maybe they changed the current circuit, but unlikely.
I just don't care enough to argue with you.SickenedEmotions99 wrote:I'm fully aware of what a Noise Gate does. I tried all of my guitars, on any setting I could think of. So I know I'm not just an idiot. I would think that trying it with 4 different guitars, all with very different pickups, would be a worthy experiment. With the threshold turned up high, it cancelled all the hum, but it killed the tone. Even with the threshold about 1/3 of the way up, it still killed the tone, sustain, and didn't do a damn thing about the hum. I have a high gain amp, and use alot of distortion/fuzz, so I figured it'd help. It didn't. I've also read a bunch of reviews from guys with the exact same problem. So it's not just me.PenPen wrote:Sickened, did you read WTF I wrote and understand what a noise gate does? You had the threshold too high, the decay of your notes went under threshold, and it shut the signal down. Exactly what it is supposed to do. Also, you normally don't want to have a noise gate running ALL the time.
The MXR Gate supposedly has a really smooth on/off, sounding more "natural" was what I'd read in reviews of it. Now, granted that was a DIY build of the original, so maybe they changed the current circuit, but unlikely.
euan wrote: I'm running in monoscope right now. I can't read multiple dimensions of meta right now
Don't you need to put it after the gain stage to make it work, though? Meanin an FX loop if you're using amp distortion?SickenedEmotions99 wrote:I'm fully aware of what a Noise Gate does. I tried all of my guitars, on any setting I could think of. So I know I'm not just an idiot. I would think that trying it with 4 different guitars, all with very different pickups, would be a worthy experiment. With the threshold turned up high, it cancelled all the hum, but it killed the tone. Even with the threshold about 1/3 of the way up, it still killed the tone, sustain, and didn't do a damn thing about the hum. I have a high gain amp, and use alot of distortion/fuzz, so I figured it'd help. It didn't. I've also read a bunch of reviews from guys with the exact same problem. So it's not just me.PenPen wrote:Sickened, did you read WTF I wrote and understand what a noise gate does? You had the threshold too high, the decay of your notes went under threshold, and it shut the signal down. Exactly what it is supposed to do. Also, you normally don't want to have a noise gate running ALL the time.
The MXR Gate supposedly has a really smooth on/off, sounding more "natural" was what I'd read in reviews of it. Now, granted that was a DIY build of the original, so maybe they changed the current circuit, but unlikely.
- noirengineer
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