Here's a little update, I started tracing it, but it was such a confusing layout that I decided to do a component trace first. Green is topside, purple is underneath. Looks like the raw DC from the battery or jack goes straight to the FETs, but has to get through the regulator to go to the two ICs. With a 9v battery that reads 9.8v out of circuit powering everything, the voltage feeding the regulator drops to 7.6v, and reads 6.1v after. With a 12v adapter, everything is as it should be, with 12v before the reg, and 9v exactly after.
roseblood11 wrote:Interesting. Does the 2206 work properly with 6.1V?
It was working when I first got the pedal and was testing it with a battery only, I'll double check the voltages when I get the jacks soldered back in.
"You've converted me to Cubic thinking. Where do I sign up for the newsletter? I need to learn more about how I can break free from ONEism Death Math." - Soulsonic
Got the circuit working on the breadboard and sounding identical to the original, so schematic verified. Things learned:
1. This thing eats batteries, and if the voltage sags just a little, the 2206 stops oscillating or acts weird.
2. The 270p input cap makes a big difference, a 330p sounds terrible, and 220p sounds much better
3. It's really picky about the FETs, since there's no mix control between the two sides, you have to use 4 of the same type of FET to balance everything, and J201s have too much gain, while MPF102 doesn't have enough gain. I only had three 2n5485s and ended up putting a 2sk30 in the treb side and it was ok.
4. This pedal works even better without the 7809. It would probably be more reliable, and still protected from over voltage with a 9v zener or something, with a simple dropping resistor and an extra filter cap to supply the chips to keep the thumping out of the circuit.
KindaFuzzy wrote:
4. This pedal works even better without the 7809. It would probably be more reliable, and still protected from over voltage with a 9v zener or something, with a simple dropping resistor and an extra filter cap to supply the chips to keep the thumping out of the circuit.
the 7809 is probably there to let you run the fets at 18v. fixing the Vcc of the function gen chip most likely keeps the modulation range and depth the same regardless of 9v-18v operation. a 9v zener would dissipate quite a bit more heat when run at 18v too
Black Dynamite wrote:you need to shut the fuck up when grown folks is talkin.
Perhaps there's a base here for developing a FSB-modded version of the Pareidolia. The XR-2206 is able to output squarewaves, ramps etc as shown on this excerpt from the application notes I'm gonna try this at some point!
Completed builds: Alembic-like state-variable and sallen-key filter preamps Lovepedal Eternity Phase 100 Brown source Fuzz Face Flipster Alembic F2B (tube preamp) Opamp and FET buffers Loads of speakercabinets and ampracks Busy building a modular synth (ssm2044 vcfs, preamps, ADSR's, VCO's, VCA's) Tables Bookshelves Basses So many things! :D