Jero wrote:Yea, maybe the second one would be easier to follow for you. You don't really have to ground the jacks to each other, as they will make that connection through the enclosure...which means you also don't actually have to wire a ground to the output at all. If you're doing all this on a breadboard type situation first however, you WILL need those all to be grounded together.
Another thing it could be is the trace cuts.
The first time I did vero, I made all my trace cuts on the copper, just like in the picture (the one you posted for example), but then when I flipped the board over to populate it, the cuts were in the wrong spots, cause I didn't equate for the orientation...aka all the cuts on the left, ended up on the right and vice versa. Does that make sense at all?
Thanks again for the tips Jero. I'll leave out grounding the jacks for my current attempt. Just put the one green ground wire to input I guess.
Thanks again
I just made the same mistake of doing the trace cuts on the copper side for my new Fuzz Face attempt but realised before soldering parts in.
I think I also finally realised my main mistake for the original build.
I had a wrong resistor on my layout for R1 (must've stuffed it up first time I put my soldering iron to it). What a great start to DIY that was.
Can't figure out what value the resistor was. It was a Carbon Gold/Yellow/Orange/Orange resistor, I'm pretty sure that was my main problem.
From what I'm hearing he over wiring and slightly wrong capacitor value probably didn't prevent it from working so I'd say it was the resistor.
I've learnt heaps from everybody helping me out though. It's given me a much better understanding of layouts.
I guess you do learn from your mistakes.
Judging be the amount of errors I've made with my Fuzz Face and the 2 BYOC's I've built, I should be getting a decent education so far.
On the plus side, I did eventually get the BYOC's working, the Fuzz Face is my first fully qualified failure.
But hopefully I'll get the next one up and running yet (knock on wood).
Thanks again to everybody who has helped me out.