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Passive circuits

Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2011 6:16 pm
by Blurillaz
Show me some interesting ones.

Re: Passive circuits

Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2011 7:47 pm
by comtrails70
:picard:

Re: Passive circuits

Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2011 10:09 pm
by smallsnd/bigsnd
http://thermionic.info/

see below:
James, E. J. "Simple Tone Control Circuit: Bass and Treble, Cut and Lift," Wireless World, February 1948, p. 48-50 (PDF, 176K)

Re: Passive circuits

Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2011 10:46 pm
by raginreggie

Re: Passive circuits

Posted: Thu Jan 06, 2011 11:08 pm
by eatyourguitar
smallsnd/bigsnd wrote:http://thermionic.info/

see below:
James, E. J. "Simple Tone Control Circuit: Bass and Treble, Cut and Lift," Wireless World, February 1948, p. 48-50 (PDF, 176K)

:excellent: this could fit in a hammond 1590lb. possibly a dual gang pot for the fancy one knob tone control. squarewave parade did a passive distortion pedal in a 1590lb. not sure whats in it but its probably diodes. stew mac is selling a guitar mod called black ice. its just two diodes repackaged unicorn poop. :lol: that other link is just crazy. 6 knobs, description says that it makes it louder but its passive WTF?

Re: Passive circuits

Posted: Fri Jan 07, 2011 1:56 am
by McSpunckle
One time I put schottky diodes between my bass' tone knob and ground, so the high end gets clipped instead of just reduced. Gives the bass a nice growl without any extra effects, but it just isn't as cool as a good overdrive pedal.

Re: Passive circuits

Posted: Fri Jan 07, 2011 3:03 am
by multi_s
this should work passive, optimistic 'octave' circuit.

go here http://www.falstad.com/circuit/

and import

Code: Select all

$ 1 5.0E-6 10.20027730826997 50 5.0 50
169 288 144 384 144 0 4.0 3.0 -0.008627933599177386 -5.21772295508649E-19 0.00527489023757195
v 144 144 144 208 0 1 100.0 5.0 0.0 0.0 0.5
w 144 208 288 208 0
g 384 176 416 176 0
d 384 144 448 144 1 0.805904783
d 384 208 448 208 1 0.805904783
r 512 176 512 272 0 1000.0
w 448 144 512 176 0
w 448 208 512 176 0
g 512 272 512 320 0
w 144 144 288 144 0
x 515 121 578 127 0 24 youve
x 537 169 584 177 0 35 got
x 547 239 611 246 0 30 male
o 1 32 0 35 5.0 0.025 0 -1
o 8 32 0 35 10.0 0.0125 1 -1


eatyourguitar wrote:...description says that it makes it louder but its passive WTF?


transformers or resonant circuits could give voltage boosts (passive). transformers 'transform' energy. a perfect transformer has power out = power in. Power = Voltage * Current. So given a signal on the primary side, the secondary side will have the same energy, but maybe in a transformed state. For example say input = 1 V @ 1 A = 1 Watt. Depending on the turns ratio you can rig it so you might get 10V @ .1A = 1 Watt. Guitar amps act as voltage amplifiers and the inputs are usually fairly high impedance. So basically it just takes into account the Voltage of the incoming signal and not the current. End result is a 'passive' boost.

Re: Passive circuits

Posted: Fri Jan 07, 2011 12:20 pm
by eatyourguitar
yeah I was thinking about the example with the transformer but you just confirmed it to be true. im still learning. its the opposite of the impedance up pedal im building. the problem with that pedal is the huge drop in volume :mad: its something like 60:1. I havent tried it yet, its all theory. I'm getting Off topic sorry.

resonators, I never actualy used them :idk: maybe I should put a couple resonators before some diodes. that would be badass

Re: Passive circuits

Posted: Fri Jan 07, 2011 1:10 pm
by fuzz/volume-full
you could try to use the transormer idea at the very end of the circuit but if the volume drop is hugh you'd need a pretty big *gets out physics book* secondry coil? and small primary coil, i dunno if i got the order right there. :erm:
also if a passive circuit was made it wouldn't nessaserly need input and output caps as there's no dc current right?

Re: Passive circuits

Posted: Fri Jan 07, 2011 7:49 pm
by aussy
squarewave parade had some passive thingamabobs
a distortion and a ring mod if I recall correctly