gain control problem

Started by Joecool85, January 01, 2006, 11:09:26 AM

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Joecool85

I tried having a gain control that controlled how much ground (and consequently power) was going to the tranny...but didn't like the outcome, it worked ok and I might go back to it.  But I was thinking about doing a gain control by having a 100k audio taper pot before the in cap on my pedal.  I tried it, and it works pretty well, with the except of two things, it seems to cut the highs when turning down the gain, and also the bottom 25% or so of the pot doesn't do anything, no sound comes out at all.  Any ideas?
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d95err

It would be easier to help you if you mentioned what it is you're trying to build...

Joecool85

Its a custom OD I'm working on...I guess I'll need to get that schematic drawn out so you guys can help more...sorry  ;)
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https://www.ssguitar.com

Joecool85

Well, here is the big thing, when the gain pot is at 0 resistance, its full on gain, around 85k ohms is as low as I want, it starts shutting down the volume.  I know 85k audio pots don't exist, is there a way to make a 50k an 85k?  like have one of the lugs have a 35k resistor on it or something?  This is basically a volume pot before the effect btw.  So the in is on lug 3, the out going to the effect is lug 2, and ground is lug 1.
Life is what you make it.
https://www.ssguitar.com

d95err

Quote from: Joecool85 on January 01, 2006, 01:13:58 PM
Well, here is the big thing, when the gain pot is at 0 resistance, its full on gain, around 85k ohms is as low as I want, it starts shutting down the volume.  I know 85k audio pots don't exist, is there a way to make a 50k an 85k?  like have one of the lugs have a 35k resistor on it or something?  This is basically a volume pot before the effect btw.  So the in is on lug 3, the out going to the effect is lug 2, and ground is lug 1.

A series resistor with a 50k pot would mean you can't get full gain, which is probably not what you want.

Use a 100k pot. The difference to 85k should be very small, it's up to the user to avoid those last 15k. If you really want to get less than 100k, put a resistor in paralell with the pot. A 500k resistor should get you a range of about 0 - 83k, although the taper will be sligtly different.


Joecool85

If you put a 35k resistor off lug one before ground, wouldn't that mean that at all the way to the left it would still have 0 resistance and would throw all of the signal through lug 2 and at full to the right it would be 85k resistance?
Life is what you make it.
https://www.ssguitar.com

d95err

Quote from: Joecool85 on January 01, 2006, 03:20:04 PM
If you put a 35k resistor off lug one before ground, wouldn't that mean that at all the way to the left it would still have 0 resistance and would throw all of the signal through lug 2 and at full to the right it would be 85k resistance?

Hmm, I forgot it's a voltage divider, I was thinking series (feedback loop) type gain. Sorry!

Since it is a voltage divider, the absolute value of the pot has very little importance. A 100k or 50k pot should make very little difference. What is important is the ratio between the series resistance on the signal (lug 3 to 2) and the resistance to ground (lug 2 to 1).

I assume that the 85k value you mention is the resistance between lugs 3 and 2 when the volume starts to cut off. In this case you have a 15k/85k ratio or about 0.18. So, in order to get that ratio when the gain control is turned fully down, insert a resistors between lug 1 and ground that gives you the ratio you are looking for.

The pot is 100k, so the series resistor would be about 0.18 x 100k = 18k.