Have you *measured* it or are you going off printed code?baremountain wrote:It's a type B/linear pot.
A drawing might help me visualize why the taper response flips in your application.
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Have you *measured* it or are you going off printed code?baremountain wrote:It's a type B/linear pot.
Fair point, I have only read the written code. I can check that when I get home.crochambeau wrote:Have you *measured* it or are you going off printed code?baremountain wrote:It's a type B/linear pot.
A drawing might help me visualize why the taper response flips in your application.
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Code: Select all
V in > pot doing voltage divider > opamp doing actual voltage delivery based on what it sees at input and gain configuration > output
Code: Select all
V in > opamp doing actual voltage delivery based on what it sees at input and gain configuration > pot dividing voltage > output
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IT;s not a blocking cap, its a DC supply drawn backwards.crochambeau wrote:VR1 & VR2, the cap that's blocking 12VDC on the input of that regulator is a typo, right?
the circuit will make a llel load between the wiper and ground. the measured voltage with nothing plugged in and the measured voltage with something connected will be different. if the load is low in resistance it will be drastically different. by low i mean even close to teh scale of teh resistance of teh pot, so a load of even 5mA or qqc is high.crochambeau wrote:JonnyAngle wrote:I'll take up your offer on a diagram RMA
Evan, it's just a variable resistor from 9v to 0v
Okay, Fig 1 depicts what you've got with the limited useful window of rotation. The upper point and lower point of rotation will have to be direct measured for the voltages that apply to your unit, I've just tossed a couple numbers there that are meaningless beyond the example.
So, first thing to do is determine the percentage of important voltages (in this case 6.8 is JUST BEFORE you start to observe the starved effect, and 3 is when the circuit falls flat), and know your supply voltage.
Supply voltage is 9.0, so 0.09 is one percent.
6.8 divided by 0.09 is roughly 75.56%.
3 volts is 33.33%
Ah cool, I would not have interpreted it in that manner if I had picked the schematic up off the sidewalk.multi_s wrote:IT;s not a blocking cap, its a DC supply drawn backwards.crochambeau wrote:VR1 & VR2, the cap that's blocking 12VDC on the input of that regulator is a typo, right?
True, I'm still mired in the land of old school electronics that are happy enough to run off a dry cell. In this incarnation the voltage divider sees negligible loading through the gate of the mosfet and the BJT can be somewhat scaled up to support heavier loading. The pot section could just be exchanged for the opamp scaling (and since the opamps have high input impedance and are happy to drive the BE current of the BJT the mosfet buffer can also be ousted).multi_s wrote:Why even this won;t work for a circuit that draws any appreciable current and why voltage sag is still a dark art that is different with every pedal:
multi_s wrote:IT;s not a blocking cap, its a DC supply drawn backwards.crochambeau wrote:VR1 & VR2, the cap that's blocking 12VDC on the input of that regulator is a typo, right?
Also none of the ideas presented will work that well.
Why linear pot gives non linear response at input:
its in llel with R8 in your drawing.
Why linear pot gives non linear resonse at output
it is in llel wiht the load of the circuit it is driving. its a tl072. who knows many reasons why it might not work.
Alright so my terminology may be a little shaky. I use a second board that's essentailly converting to 12V bipolar power rails inside - that's AC, yeah?cherler wrote: Baremountain, I wish I could help more but I really don't know what's going on in your drawing haha. One suggestion I could make though, since you're going for a DC amp here (right? the CV is at most super low frequency witha DC offset?) you could go for a rail-to-rail op amp. Then you'll have access to the full range of voltage you're powering them with and won't need to handle any reference shenanigans.
I'm thinking along the lines of giving each op amp +12/-12, reference the + pin to ground, and use a rotary switch to swap in different values for R2 for different gains and use an input pot to trim if need be. I have no idea if I'm even remotely on base with what you're trying to do though![]()
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Shaky terminology happens to all of us. Bipolar DC is not AC, it's only AC if the current source is alternating between a positive and a negative excursion.baremountain wrote:Alright so my terminology may be a little shaky. I use a second board that's essentailly converting to 12V bipolar power rails inside - that's AC, yeah?
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