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- Xref: sparky sci.electronics:20986 alt.guitar:10929 rec.music.makers.guitar:984
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics,alt.guitar,rec.music.makers.guitar
- Path: sparky!uunet!stanford.edu!lucid.com!karoshi!till
- From: till@acid-rain.lucid.com (Don Tillman)
- Subject: Re: purpose built distortion producing circuits
- In-Reply-To: ah335@cleveland.Freenet.Edu's message of 17 Dec 1992 00:14:05 GMT
- Message-ID: <TILL.92Dec17111624@acid-rain.lucid.com>
- Sender: usenet@lucid.com
- Reply-To: till@lucid.com
- Organization: Lucid, Inc.
- References: <1gogodINNo8e@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu>
- Date: 17 Dec 92 11:16:24
- Lines: 49
-
- From: ah335@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Richard Banks)
- Date: 17 Dec 1992 00:14:05 GMT
- Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH (USA)
-
- I'm constructing a purpose built distortion producing circuit to
- be used to add gain to audio signal of an electric guitar.
-
- The circuit uses 4 stage op amp noninverting configuration to
- produce a gain of 1855 running off a 9V power supply.
-
- My problem is the unit is acting like a noise gate, when the signal
- attenuates the circuit "cuts off." Therefore it is very quiet,
- but does not produce long sustain, which is what I want.
-
- Without a complete description of the circuit nobody will be able to give
- you much in the way of useful advice. That said, I'll go out on a limb and
- predict that from your description of the effects, it sure sounds like at
- least one of the op-amps is running with DC gain, and some offset voltage
- is throwing it into clipping with no signal present (causing the quiet),
- and when your guitar signal is large enough to overcome this, you hear the
- distorted sound.
-
- The value of the feedback resistors are 100k and the value of the
- power resistors is 220 ohm.
-
- What is a "power resistor" in this context?
-
- Also on a side note, what is the best op amp config to use
- for distortion, inverting or noninverting?
-
- The non-answer is to not use op-amps at all. ("Op-amps are for weenies.")
-
- If you insist on using op-amps, and are using diodes in the feedback loop
- to generate distortion, an inverting configuration is best because it
- doesn't have the minimum gain deal that a non-inverting stage does.
-
- If you insist on using op-amps, and use the op-amps themselves for
- distortion (yechhhh!), or using diodes outside the feedback loop for
- distortion, then a non-inverting stage is better due to input impedance,
- noise, and gain issues.
-
- I would think noninverting, because inverting amps cause
- a lot more bias current at high gain.
-
- Why do you think inverting amps configurations cause a lot more bias at
- high gain?
-
- -- Don
-
-