It is a multi-fuzz machine! I always felt that a lot of Fuzz are quite a "one trick pony", they have a very characteristic sound that can be modulated by mods, but still sounds "like a fuzz face", "like a big muff"...etc. Moreover, fuzz are usually quite simple circuits, and I find that allowing one spot per fuzz on a pedalboard can quickly be space-inefficient.
So I decided to create a multi fuzz pedal, with no more than 3 different fuzz inside : a germanium Fuzz Face, a Muff Fuzz and a Companion Fuzz, which should provide the 3 main "flavors" of fuzz in this world: a classic warm, soft fuzz face, a "chainsaw", very raspy Companion Fuzz, and a compressed and heavy Muff Fuzz.
On top of that, I added an upper octave generator that allows to combine it with any fuzz, with a potentiometer to adjust the amount of octave. It is based on the Green Ringer circuit, which is a small, but efficient analog octaver circuit.
And of course, I made it fit in a 125B enclosure...
Here it is in its current form:
The top three knobs allow to set the gain for each fuzz : Fuzz face (1969), Muff Fuzz (1970) and the Companion Fuzz (1971). There is an output volume knob, a tone knob and the octave knob which allow to set the amount of octave.
The central switch allows to activate or not the octave, so you can have the fuzz with or without octave. You can also have the octave on a clean sound !
The last "pot" is a 4 positions switch that allow you to choose between clean and the 3 fuzz. I also added my relay bypass system for soft switching and silent switching.
As you guessed it is a fairly complex build. Moreover, I had some troubles with it and had to modify it quite a bit. I added a klon buffer before the tone circuitry, and also tried several capacitors and resistor values on several parts of the circuit. Here is the inside of the pedal, beware it is quite messy!
Outside the box it looks like this (messy as well!):
I used a small 4P2T rotary switch to select between the fuzz. Note that there is a jack that does not fit the PCB because of this switch (facepalm).
Conceiving the PCB was really difficult, I think it is the most complicated PCB I ever made! Indeed, there are 3 fuzz circuits on the top, the Green Ringer build, a LPB1 for the final volume, and my relay bypass system! (who said that fuzz were simple circuits?)
Here is the schematic:
I separated every circuit (and added some notes for the prototyping. Here is the annotated circuit schematic:
It is quite a modular system. The signal first goes through the Green Ringer (or not depending on the switch), then it goes to the fuzz that is selected through the 4P2T switch, and then it goes through the tone
I had to add a Klon buffer to lower the impedance in order to make the tone control section to properly work. The final scheme is like this :
In the end, it works! However, it is still in the development hell for a few reasons:
- The Fuzz Face and the Muff Fuzz circuit sound quite similar. Indeed, the two circuits are really close. The Muff Fuzz sounds more like a silicon Fuzz Face than a Big Muff. I think I will replace it by a "mini IC muff" with a different schematic. Thus, we would really have three "flavors" of Fuzz.
- The Klon buffer is not on the PCB originally, so I have to add it as well. It is essential to make the tone section properly work
- The volume levels between the fuzz are not similar at all. The Companion Fuzz is especially low in volume because of the tone section on the fuzz. The Muff fuzz is also slightly louder than the Fuzz Face. I added a resistor at the end of the circuit to "flatten" the final volume, but the LPB1 boost is not "strong enough" to increase the volume without distortion.
- The LPB1 boost will be replaced with a IC based volume section for less distortion and more output volume.
So, I still have plenty of work to do with this one, and frankly, I am still really busy with the crowdfunding campaign. Modifying the PCB is not easy as well as it is fairly complex. However, I will do it soon! Hopefully, it will be available in 2017...
This looks awesome! Maybe a version that has the octave as a stomp instead of a switch and I would definitely buy it! Might need to abandon the relay bypass or switch to a bigger enclosure to fit that though. Anyway, great idea!
ReplyDeleteAt first, I was indeed thinking adding a switch to it. Maybe for the 2.0 version!
DeleteJust found your site, outstanding!!! So can the Green Ringer run on clean tone without adding any distortion or additional drive? I've always been under the impression it had a fuzz circuit in it as well. Thanks again for this site!!!
ReplyDeletea few thoughts.. first of all the idea is great, i really dig it, but i would organize all you have in a different way and i feel the urge to share the ideas. first, i would put the green ringer after the fuzz(es). then, how about using the klon buffer as a mixer, and having the three upper pots as volumes for each fuzz? leave out the gain pots and change for fixed resistors. fuzz face and companion with gain at max, and the muff with with a high but not max gain(since those are the most "classical" settings). you can even out the volumes of each with a couple of fixed voltage dividers, so the mixer knobs work evenly. the tone knob is trycky, since the FF and companion dont have, and muff does.. but the BMP tone contorl would alter too much the sound of the first too fuzzes due to the mid cut. you could modify the BMP to be flat in the middle, and add some filters to have the mid cut in the muff circuit. thats it. i really like this idea of the multi fuzz :)
ReplyDeleteChouette projet! J'attends d'entendre cette fuzz avec bcp d'impatience! Comme tu dis : On est toujours un peu "a la rue" avec une seule fuzz. La, c'est l'occasion de sortir de couteau suisse de la fuzz! Et pis moi c'est la seule saturation qui me botte la fuzz. J'ai une expandora qui a un mode "chelou" qui donne un resultat sympa en terme de fuzzz, que j'ai jamais entendu ailleurs. Penses y si tu veux vraiment un element differenciant ;) Bonne continuation!
ReplyDeleteReminds me of Beavis's FuzzLab pedal, but crammed into a tiny box!
ReplyDeletePlease build me one of these with the green ringer on a second footswitch!!
ReplyDelete