I recently bought a Ghost Pepbox Fuzz from the Buy/Sell board and it has a problem, I'm wondering about what to do with it.
I got it, it worked okay, basically fuzz came through the pedal at 100% up on the gain, at anything like 95% and below, it would get spitty/intermittent, then like 85% and below, there was zero sound coming through. Put a fresh battery in and it sounded the same, I knew it was a spitty fuzz, but figured maybe the bias was a little off, turned the bias knob a tiny amount, and now the pedal doesn't work at all. Did I kill the transistors or something with that bias tweak?
Edit: tried turning the pedal up all the way and I can hear a very very faint (hardly audible) fuzz effect coming through at certain settings with the bias knob.
Issue with Fuzz recently bought
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The DIY forum is for personal projects (things that are not for sale, not in production), info sharing, peer to peer assistance. No backdoor spamming (DIY posts that are actually advertisements for your business). No clones of in-production pedals. If you have concerns or questions, feel free to PM admin. Thanks so much!
- repoman
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Issue with Fuzz recently bought
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- crochambeau
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Re: Issue with Fuzz recently bought
I'm about to hit the "walk face first into a spider's web" level of stupid question here. Someone hold my beer...
Have you tried nudging the bias control in the opposite direction?
Without looking at a schematic it's hard to spit-ball ideas. I doubt that crashing or flooding the bias has harmed anything (I could be wrong, but since this isn't a power section I could be right). Is the bias control a pot strapped across the power rails, or are there ranging resistors involved?
Can you grab a multi-meter and measure voltages?
Have you tried nudging the bias control in the opposite direction?
Without looking at a schematic it's hard to spit-ball ideas. I doubt that crashing or flooding the bias has harmed anything (I could be wrong, but since this isn't a power section I could be right). Is the bias control a pot strapped across the power rails, or are there ranging resistors involved?
Can you grab a multi-meter and measure voltages?
- repoman
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Re: Issue with Fuzz recently bought
Yeah, theres nothing really audible (except for that tiny, tiny amount in one small area) across the entire sweep of the bias trim pot.
I know nothing about circuits really so I couldn't tell you if the bias control is going across the power rails or anything like that. There is a PCB building guide here though: http://www.ghosteffects.co.uk/pdf/si_pe ... _guide.pdf
Ha, just reading it it says on the 3rd page: "Do NOT turn the bias control all the way up as you may fry the 2nd transistor, BE AWARE!" although the pedal stopped working immediately pretty much when I touched the bias pot- the arrow on the bias pot was pointing to about 6:30 on the dial, and I turned it to about the 6 o'clock position and it stopped working. The ends of the bias sweep go from about 8:30 to noonish.
I guess I can try swapping out the 2nd transistor!
Edit: I just swapped the 2nd transistor with a 2n2222 I had and now the pedal sounds AWESOME!! It only gets splatty down below noon on the gain knob and get all sorts of thick and freaky above that, sounds completely different! Super thicc and weird at 100% gain!
I know nothing about circuits really so I couldn't tell you if the bias control is going across the power rails or anything like that. There is a PCB building guide here though: http://www.ghosteffects.co.uk/pdf/si_pe ... _guide.pdf
Ha, just reading it it says on the 3rd page: "Do NOT turn the bias control all the way up as you may fry the 2nd transistor, BE AWARE!" although the pedal stopped working immediately pretty much when I touched the bias pot- the arrow on the bias pot was pointing to about 6:30 on the dial, and I turned it to about the 6 o'clock position and it stopped working. The ends of the bias sweep go from about 8:30 to noonish.
I guess I can try swapping out the 2nd transistor!
Edit: I just swapped the 2nd transistor with a 2n2222 I had and now the pedal sounds AWESOME!! It only gets splatty down below noon on the gain knob and get all sorts of thick and freaky above that, sounds completely different! Super thicc and weird at 100% gain!
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- crochambeau
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Re: Issue with Fuzz recently bought
Yay! Sounds like a bum transistor all right.repoman wrote:Edit: I just swapped the 2nd transistor with a 2n2222 I had and now the pedal sounds AWESOME!! It only gets splatty down below noon on the gain knob and get all sorts of thick and freaky above that, sounds completely different! Super thicc and weird at 100% gain!
- Jero
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Re: Issue with Fuzz recently bought
Nice that you got it working!...Lame that they send those out with that issue, however.
I make noise toys under Stomping Stones
[url=http://www.stompingstones.com[/url]
[url=http://www.stompingstones.com[/url]
oldangelmidnight wrote:This is the classic ILF I love. Emotional highs and lows. Scooped mids in my heart all day long.
- BetterOffShred
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Re: Issue with Fuzz recently bought
I was thinking that having any sort of control that the customer can access that BBQs a transistor seems like a fairly poor design decision 

- crochambeau
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Re: Issue with Fuzz recently bought
A ranging resistor will cost a couple pennies. That shit adds up, yo.BetterOffShred wrote:I was thinking that having any sort of control that the customer can access that BBQs a transistor seems like a fairly poor design decision
- Jero
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Re: Issue with Fuzz recently bought
crochambeau wrote:A ranging resistor will cost a couple pennies. That shit adds up, yo.BetterOffShred wrote:I was thinking that having any sort of control that the customer can access that BBQs a transistor seems like a fairly poor design decision

Maybe it's job security. They can get some extra scratch every time someone sends one in that's past warranty.
(totally kidding, Ian/Ghost)
I make noise toys under Stomping Stones
[url=http://www.stompingstones.com[/url]
[url=http://www.stompingstones.com[/url]
oldangelmidnight wrote:This is the classic ILF I love. Emotional highs and lows. Scooped mids in my heart all day long.
- BetterOffShred
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Re: Issue with Fuzz recently bought
Yeah man I'm not digging at the builder, my bad. I was just saying from my experiences if you put a handle on something, someone is going to turn it
Building production pedals is such a thankless job. People think it's like buying a cheeseburger. Lots of quality behind the scenes people take for granted.

Building production pedals is such a thankless job. People think it's like buying a cheeseburger. Lots of quality behind the scenes people take for granted.
- MechaGodzilla
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Re: Issue with Fuzz recently bought
Have to remember that he sold these as DIY PCBs so tinkerers would have the option to do that kind of thing themselves, prebuilt ones from Ian wouldn't need messing with by the user (unless you'd spec'd an external bias pot, then he'd probably have stuck limiters in thereBetterOffShred wrote:I was thinking that having any sort of control that the customer can access that BBQs a transistor seems like a fairly poor design decision
