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DIY Stompboxes => Building your own stompbox => Topic started by: bentium on March 27, 2005, 04:03:00 PM

Title: unable to bias prof tweed :(
Post by: bentium on March 27, 2005, 04:03:00 PM
hey
finally after a few weeks, i'm able to get busy again with some electronics :)

i had a prof tweed that i build a couple of weeks ago that didnt work
i was unable to bias q3, it jump from 0mv directly up to 9v (with bairly turning it)
q1 and q2 were nicely biased (4.5v and 4.6v)
i checked my wirings/ leads, no faults
so my guess was: bad trimpot
i swapped it for another one: same problem

could it be that q3 is busted?
Title: unable to bias prof tweed :(
Post by: amz-fx on March 27, 2005, 04:07:22 PM
Quotecould it be that q3 is busted?
Could be...  also possible that you have the pins oriented wrong on q3. What you describe could possibly happen if the gate were connected to the trimmer.

regards, Jack
Title: unable to bias prof tweed :(
Post by: dpresley58 on March 28, 2005, 10:07:49 AM
I had a similar problem, except with Q1. Just couldn't get the biasing to behave. It'd been built on perfboard (the unpadded variety) and I had inadvertently made some sort of small connection between two of the socket pins Q1 was mounted in. Couldn't even see it, really, but it was obviously there. Sometimes I'd get a brief continuity on the meter, sometimes not.

Ended up taking that socket out and replacing it, paying attention to keep the solders clean. The 100k trimpots are pretty touchy, but I was able to get a voltage close enough to 4.5 for the tranny to be happy.

Just a thought for what it's worth. Hope it helps.
Title: unable to bias prof tweed :(
Post by: bentium on March 30, 2005, 05:27:36 AM
Quote from: dpresley58I had a similar problem, except with Q1. Just couldn't get the biasing to behave. It'd been built on perfboard (the unpadded variety) and I had inadvertently made some sort of small connection between two of the socket pins Q1 was mounted in. Couldn't even see it, really, but it was obviously there. Sometimes I'd get a brief continuity on the meter, sometimes not.

Ended up taking that socket out and replacing it, paying attention to keep the solders clean. The 100k trimpots are pretty touchy, but I was able to get a voltage close enough to 4.5 for the tranny to be happy.

Just a thought for what it's worth. Hope it helps.
i'm planning on taking the last section apart (when q3 starts until end) apart, and resolder it on the perf