Pedal nerds: Flashing LEDs responding to transients.

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James
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Pedal nerds: Flashing LEDs responding to transients.

Post by James »

How difficult is it to make a little circuit that makes an LED flash when a signal reaches a certain level? Sort of like a peak meter I guess. I'm guessing you'd need something in the circuit to control a threshold above which they turn on, and you would need to tweak the circuit to get that right, and then maybe something for a decay after they turn on, but I've no idea of the mechanics of it all.
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Post by Will »

Flashing? Like a warning light? Or just something that lights up when signal goes through?

A circuit to boost the hell out of the signal, followed by an led placed between the signal and ground. Then a knob to control the amount of signal going to the LED (threshold, basically). That would be the simplest thing.
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Post by paul_ »

Some EHX pedals like the polychorus have an overload LED.
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Post by Haze »

luckily i've had this kicking about
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Post by Will »

I'd still throw in at least a trimpot before those LEDs to set the sensitivity.
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Re: Pedal nerds: Flashing LEDs responding to transients.

Post by endsjustifymeans »

James wrote:How difficult is it to make a little circuit that makes an LED flash when a signal reaches a certain level? Sort of like a peak meter I guess. I'm guessing you'd need something in the circuit to control a threshold above which they turn on, and you would need to tweak the circuit to get that right, and then maybe something for a decay after they turn on, but I've no idea of the mechanics of it all.
The wolfs eye on my Grumbly Wolf does this, perhaps timhulio can offer something up.
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Post by Mike »

Tim is using it for clipping.

James doesn't want that, since it will degrade the signal.

He'll want something like the circuit Haze implemented but most likely connected after a signal splitter so his pass through signal isn't mangled.
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James
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Post by James »

Yeah definitely no clipping. I want it as independent from the signal as possible.

So if I split the signal (don't know how to do that to keep it seperate) I can just use that simple circuit and adjust the value of the cap to get the sensitivity right?

I want to use two LEDs so do I just use a resistor in front of the first one and connect the second in series?
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Post by timhulio »

The answer might be 1. buffer/splitter like Mike said. Then 2. something to do with zener diodes to set the cut-off voltages for each LED.

Just skimming, but the circuit Haze posted looks like an all-or-nothing deal. The sexiest thing would be the LEDs lighting incrementally.

Sorta like on this lovely pedal I'ma gonna get as soon as it's out:
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Post by light rail coyote »

timhulio wrote:The answer might be 1. buffer/splitter like Mike said. Then 2. something to do with zener diodes to set the cut-off voltages for each LED.

Just skimming, but the circuit Haze posted looks like an all-or-nothing deal. The sexiest thing would be the LEDs lighting incrementally.

Sorta like on this lovely pedal I'ma gonna get as soon as it's out:
Image
WOW, that thing looks amazing. It has controls like a real compressor. I would love to dink around with one of those.
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timhulio
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Post by timhulio »

Supposedly a UREI 1176 compressor in pedal form. I'm quite excited about this. And it's good for guitar too.