Expert Pedal Building Advice Needed

Pickups, pedals, amps, cabs, combos

Moderated By: mods

User avatar
Fibus
.
.
Posts: 553
Joined: Tue May 20, 2008 1:15 pm
Location: Limerick, Ireland

Expert Pedal Building Advice Needed

Post by Fibus »

I built my first ever pedal and its broken. Its a tubescreamer from General Guitar Gadgets I'm not sure if anyone has any experience with them but the volume on mine is screwed as you can see from the video below there is a huge volume drop when the pedal is on and also if i turn the volume up full it just cuts out completely.

[youtube][/youtube]

I talked to Mike and he gave me some great advice (thanks Mike). I checked the lugs on the pot when i got home and everything seems to be fine with them they are not touching the case at all. I also checked the soldering on the pcb and everything seems to be fine and measured the pot with a multimeter and it all seems to be ok. So does anyone have any ideas? Cause i am all out of them.

Here is the schematic (its a pdf)

Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated because this is kind of putting me off starting another pedal project. Thanks.
r40f
.
.
Posts: 244
Joined: Thu Feb 07, 2008 12:19 am
Location: new york
Contact:

Post by r40f »

by any chance is the pot wired to a capacitor or are the posts wired to some incorrect part?
User avatar
Ninja Mike 808
.
.
Posts: 1643
Joined: Mon Jan 14, 2008 10:06 pm
Location: DFW
Contact:

Post by Ninja Mike 808 »

So, the pot might be moving something loose when you crank it up...
Also, make sure the pot isn't wired backwards (though I doubt it is).
Maybe, they gave you the wrong pot?

Find some people who've built it already, though...
If you think of god as a pair of pants, a spiritualist thinks he needs pants, in fact he wants pants but none of the conventional types of pants seem to fit just right, so he makes his own pants and is happy that his knees are no longer cold.-fibus
User avatar
Mike
I like EL34s
Posts: 39170
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 8:30 am
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Contact:

Post by Mike »

I think now is the time to sanity check all the PCB traces with a multimeter unfortunately and go from there.
r40f
.
.
Posts: 244
Joined: Thu Feb 07, 2008 12:19 am
Location: new york
Contact:

Post by r40f »

Mike wrote:I think now is the time to sanity check all the PCB traces with a multimeter unfortunately and go from there.
yeah, if it's not something obvious, you just have to do that
User avatar
Ninja Mike 808
.
.
Posts: 1643
Joined: Mon Jan 14, 2008 10:06 pm
Location: DFW
Contact:

Post by Ninja Mike 808 »

Good luck.
If you think of god as a pair of pants, a spiritualist thinks he needs pants, in fact he wants pants but none of the conventional types of pants seem to fit just right, so he makes his own pants and is happy that his knees are no longer cold.-fibus
User avatar
Will
Up on his Whore Lore
Posts: 5328
Joined: Wed Dec 20, 2006 5:40 am
Location: MADTOWN RAT 2011

Post by Will »

Build a signal tester - they're fantastic tools for quickly debugging.
User avatar
Mike
I like EL34s
Posts: 39170
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 8:30 am
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Contact:

Post by Mike »

DuoSonicBoy wrote:Build a signal tester - they're fantastic tools for quickly debugging.
Can you link us up with some info on these?
User avatar
Ninja Mike 808
.
.
Posts: 1643
Joined: Mon Jan 14, 2008 10:06 pm
Location: DFW
Contact:

Post by Ninja Mike 808 »

Is a signal tester also called an audio probe?
If you think of god as a pair of pants, a spiritualist thinks he needs pants, in fact he wants pants but none of the conventional types of pants seem to fit just right, so he makes his own pants and is happy that his knees are no longer cold.-fibus
User avatar
Doog
mid-century modem
Posts: 23127
Joined: Mon Apr 24, 2006 4:49 pm
Location: London

Post by Doog »

Mike wrote:
DuoSonicBoy wrote:Build a signal tester - they're fantastic tools for quickly debugging.
Can you link us up with some info on these?
www.fender.com
www.marshallamps.com
www.planetwaves.com

Seriously though, what does a signal tester do?
User avatar
Mike
I like EL34s
Posts: 39170
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 8:30 am
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Contact:

Post by Mike »

You're an idiot Doog.

I mean those probes you can use to probe any point WITHIN a circuit rather than just the output. When you build complex circuits sometimes that shit doesn't work first time. I don't have an Oscilloscope.

Image

I want one badly, but until I have a workshop I have no space for one.
User avatar
Mike
I like EL34s
Posts: 39170
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 8:30 am
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Contact:

Post by Mike »

http://www.radiomods.co.nz/audioamp.html

Is this the type of thing we're talking? LIke a small board mounted audio Amp?

Image
User avatar
Fibus
.
.
Posts: 553
Joined: Tue May 20, 2008 1:15 pm
Location: Limerick, Ireland

Post by Fibus »

r40f wrote:by any chance is the pot wired to a capacitor or are the posts wired to some incorrect part?
Its wired to the pcb, i'm not sure what you mean by posts though.
Ninja Mike 808 wrote:So, the pot might be moving something loose when you crank it up...
Also, make sure the pot isn't wired backwards (though I doubt it is).
Maybe, they gave you the wrong pot?

Find some people who've built it already, though...
The pot isn't loose, its a tight as it can go and all the soldering on it is solid. I don't think the pot is the issue though since this is the second one i have put in and its getting the same issue. It appears to be a correct pot as well.
Mike wrote:I think now is the time to sanity check all the PCB traces with a multimeter unfortunately and go from there.
I was afraid you were going to say that. I'll probably try and use the schematic to narrow it down to the level area at least hopefully that should make it easier

As for audio probes i did come across this:

Audio Probe

Un autre diagram

Which may be something i will try out
User avatar
Mike
I like EL34s
Posts: 39170
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 8:30 am
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Contact:

Post by Mike »

Nice one, I'm going to build one of these definitely:

Image
User avatar
Ninja Mike 808
.
.
Posts: 1643
Joined: Mon Jan 14, 2008 10:06 pm
Location: DFW
Contact:

Post by Ninja Mike 808 »

Yea, audio probes are my best weapon.
If you think of god as a pair of pants, a spiritualist thinks he needs pants, in fact he wants pants but none of the conventional types of pants seem to fit just right, so he makes his own pants and is happy that his knees are no longer cold.-fibus
User avatar
Mike
I like EL34s
Posts: 39170
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 8:30 am
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Contact:

Post by Mike »

I need to get some sodding crocodile clips, they're so useful.
User avatar
NickS
.
.
Posts: 13769
Joined: Mon Jan 14, 2008 9:08 am
Location: Down at the end, round by a corner

Post by NickS »

Is the pot soldered to the PCB? If not, I'd try bypassing the output buffer - take the wiper (centre tag) of the pot straight to the output and take the tag that's connected to Vr and connect it to ground instead.

If the pot's screwing up the bias of the output buffer due to a solder bridge or uncut track, that should take it out of the loop.
User avatar
Mike
I like EL34s
Posts: 39170
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 8:30 am
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Contact:

Post by Mike »

or just take the pot out of the equation, assuming it's after a coupling cap just take what was going to Lug 1 of the pot and connect that to the output connection on the 3PDT. How is the volume then?
User avatar
Fibus
.
.
Posts: 553
Joined: Tue May 20, 2008 1:15 pm
Location: Limerick, Ireland

Post by Fibus »

Mike wrote:or just take the pot out of the equation, assuming it's after a coupling cap just take what was going to Lug 1 of the pot and connect that to the output connection on the 3PDT. How is the volume then?
The pot is soldered to the pcb. But i will definitely be trying this at the weekend hopefully it will do the trick, though i have a suspicion that the problem is at the pcb level.
User avatar
Mike
I like EL34s
Posts: 39170
Joined: Thu Apr 20, 2006 8:30 am
Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
Contact:

Post by Mike »

Yeah, I've never done PCB mounted anything before. I would be nervous of that. Definitely understanding now why you have that 90% then nothing issue. MUST be related to the PCB.