could someone have a look at this an tell me if it should wo

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chisa
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could someone have a look at this an tell me if it should wo

Post by chisa »

work =

built it, seems to have some ground problem.

Image

sorry for shitty diagram
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Post by chisa »

without the battery it works fine, but using the leds causes some kind of short.
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Post by chisa »

i think i may need a 4pdt switch
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Post by sp3k »

http://www.beavisaudio.com/techpages/Pe ... itcher.htm

you have one there, with a 4pdt switch.

Also i saw something like that on the forum before, mike did it if i'm not mistaken, and i remember it needed a 4pdt switch to have leds.
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Post by hotrodperlmutter »

how is it you have it all powered by a paper bag filled with fruit?
dots wrote:fuck that guy in his bunkhole.
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Post by chisa »

hotrodperlmutter wrote:how is it you have it all powered by a paper bag filled with fruit?
MAGIC BAG
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Post by chisa »

yeah it is the 4pdt switch i need :cry: they cost a fortune and i can only find banzai who have them. still, it works without the leds so that'll do for the time being.
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Post by Haze »

Plus it'll save you on batteries/destroying the earth slowly D:
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Post by NickS »

If you just removed the red and green wires, it would work. The only thing it doesn't do then is mute the input to the unused loop, but do you really need to do that?
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Post by chisa »

NickS wrote:If you just removed the red and green wires, it would work. The only thing it doesn't do then is mute the input to the unused loop, but do you really need to do that?
well i want to be able to switch between 2 different sets of effects with the push of one button and only have 1 of the sets audible at any one time
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Post by chisa »

actually your are dead right nick, cheers, i give that a shot. can you explain the 3pdt switch to me (in regard to that diagram i had up) as i really don't understand it, at the moment i am just following diagrams without a proper understanding of what they do.
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Post by NickS »

I'm assuming you've made sure that the three "common" poles are the ones horizontally across the centre* in your diagram. So:
- Centre left is switched between top left and bottom left, switching IN between loop A send and loop B send.
- At the same time, centre middle is switched between top middle and bottom middle, switching the OUT between loop A return and loop B return.
- At the same time, right middle is switched between top right and bottom right, switching between grounding one LED or the other.

*spelling may vary in countries outside the UK. :wink:
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Post by chisa »

so it is like 3 switches in one?

what was happening with the diagonal wires i took out?
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Post by NickS »

chisa wrote:so it is like 3 switches in one?
Yep.
what was happening with the diagonal wires i took out?
Assume Loop A is selected. One diagonal wire would connect the Loop B send to ground at the same time as loop A's LED is grounded. However, the other diagonal wire connects Loop A send and the IN to the Loop B's LED, ungrounded. This isn't a particularly good idea, though the voltage on IN/Loop A send would be limited to around 1V-2V (depending on LED type) by the fact that Loop B and Loop A LEDs share the same resistor. Also, it might introduce some distortion/tone suck if you get a signal out of it, since the input to the effect loop is now in parallel with a diode.
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Post by James »

I skimmed over the thread, but I made a circuit for and built a pedal which does what it looks like you want to do.

You want to have two selectable signals like in this diagram?

Image

On mine I have it so the left 3PDT selects between which signal is active, and the right one goes between active signal/bypass so you can run straight to the amp. If you wanted one on all the time you could just use one 3PDT and get the same result. I'll find the diagram to wire it if I still have it.

Image
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Post by James »

► Show Spoiler
That's the diagram I used though you could make it without the bypass switch. You could also use a single bi-colour LED if you wanted.
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Post by chisa »

James wrote:
► Show Spoiler
That's the diagram I used though you could make it without the bypass switch. You could also use a single bi-colour LED if you wanted.
cheers, mine is the same as that but with the leds on to other side
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Post by Bill Oakley »

Try it this way:
Image
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Post by NickS »

Yes, you might want different value resistors to balance the brightness of different colour/efficiency LEDs rather than using a common one.


[edit: coomon?? tchah!]
Last edited by NickS on Tue Mar 02, 2010 8:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.