Dodgy Roger 5

Started by Kipper4, January 24, 2018, 10:23:52 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Kipper4

Hey guys
Just throwing this out here for some helpful soul to chip in with ideas on what could be done better.

I've been breadboarding this little sweller circuit for a few weeks but I've come to a crossroads where I can't seem to improve it. (improve it) shorter attack time. shorter release time.

If I make the recovery pot smaller i dont get enough compression to make it work as intended.

Heres a link to the thread that gave me the idea to persue this
http://www.diystompboxes.com/smfforum/index.php?topic=116164.msg1074641#msg1074641

I'm in a bit of a breadboard hole.
Thanks
Rich

schematic


Ma throats as dry as an overcooked kipper.


Smoke me a Kipper. I'll be back for breakfast.

Grey Paper.
http://www.aronnelson.com/DIYFiles/up/

Fender3D

What if you raise C8? Or decouple it from the zener? (maybe just a resistor...)

Quote from: Kipper4 on January 24, 2018, 10:23:52 AM
I'm in a bit of a breadboard hole.

Did you follow the breadboard rabbit?...
"NOT FLAMMABLE" is not a challenge

Kipper4

"Did you follow the breadboard rabbit?..."

Big ears?
White top hat?
Big eyes?

That's the fella. Did you follow him too?   :)

It's just a new approach for me to investigate.
Not opto.
And some different rectifiers.





Ma throats as dry as an overcooked kipper.


Smoke me a Kipper. I'll be back for breakfast.

Grey Paper.
http://www.aronnelson.com/DIYFiles/up/

rankot

  • SUPPORTER
60 pedals and counting!

TejfolvonDanone

Might be a long shot but the Q2 stage has a much higher collector resistance than on my design and it also feeds two lower value resistors. So you have a gain stage with about 35k output impedance which feeds a 33k resistor on the positive going signal and minimum 15k maximum 23k resistor otherwise. So there is a large drop between the two. I think that is the reason that if you decrease the recovery pot you get less compression.
My guess: get rid of the compression knob and put a fix resistor there. Put an NPN transistor's base (let's call it Q5) to the collector of Q2, Q5's collector to the 9V rail and its emitter through a pot (1k to 5k would be my guesstimation) to ground. That way you get a DC coupled emitter follower with variable output voltage. If this helps the case I think a dual op-amp would be better instead of Q1,Q2 and Q5.

R11 could be higher (1M like on my design) as it is there to prevent any leakage build-up.

Quotesome different rectifiers
D1,R12, the recovery pot and C8 forms a negative half-wave rectifier. It's the same as most rectifiers but it gives a negative voltage. Q2 gives additional gain so there is enough control voltage to the upper JFET's gate.
...and have a marvelous day.

Kipper4

Thanks I'll get back to it soon.
Rich
Ma throats as dry as an overcooked kipper.


Smoke me a Kipper. I'll be back for breakfast.

Grey Paper.
http://www.aronnelson.com/DIYFiles/up/