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Here are Bode Plot Generators for Guitar Freq Response

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  • Here are Bode Plot Generators for Guitar Freq Response

    Hi All,

    I’m posting this in both the Guitar Tech and Pickup Makers sections.

    Here are two Excel worksheets I developed to model the frequency response of a pickup installed in a guitar and plugged into an amp. These are one-trick ponies, not all-purpose circuit simulators. You plug in the pickup’s DCR and inductance, the tone cap, volume & tone pot values and settings, cable capacitance, and amp input resistance – and Excel (almost) instantaneously generates plots of output amplitude & phase vs. frequency.

    It would be a relatively simple matter to expand these worksheets to model a 2-pickup “Les Paul, ES-335, etc.” configuration. But I am not likely to do that until I personally need such a tool. If you want to, have at it.

    I used to use NI MultiSim for this kind of thing, but ran out of ways of sneaking around the 30-day free trial period. Can anyone recommend another free circuit simulator with relatively easy learning curve?

    Thanks,
    -rb

    GuitarBode(Standard Wiring).xls
    GuitarBode(50s Wiring).xls
    Last edited by rjb; 09-30-2011, 03:42 AM. Reason: Title
    DON'T FEED THE TROLLS!

  • #2
    LT spice is a great free spice sim, tho I have to confess, I've never gotten a spice sim to match pickup resonance behavior, it's just too distributed to be well handled in a lumped sim.

    Linear Technology - Design Simulation and Device Models
    making 63 and 66 T-bird pickups at ThunderBucker Ranch

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    • #3
      Originally posted by marku52 View Post
      Thanks for the lead; I'll have to check out LT Spice.

      Originally posted by marku52 View Post
      tho I have to confess, I've never gotten a spice sim to match pickup resonance behavior, it's just too distributed to be well handled in a lumped sim.
      Then I guess you'll have no use for my spreadsheets. They're pretty lumpy- based on Lemme's first-order approximation, with no consideration of eddy currents, AC resistance, etc. Just something for neophytes like me to play with. Oh well.

      Thanks,
      -rb
      DON'T FEED THE TROLLS!

      Comment


      • #4
        Simetrix Intro might be another good candidate to consider. Some years ago I was looking for a circuit simulator and noticed Rod Elliott recommended this one at his website. Versions keep improving - including the circuit editor, which I find quite user friendly and enables you to design and test a passive guitar circuit from nothing in a very short time. The free version permits just a limited number of components, but still enough for guitar and most stompbox sized stuff. I just regret the absence of a log potentiometer model, and work around it by applying logarithmic data to the linear model.

        I agree that a spice simulation will only be as truthful as the models used (lies, damned lies and spice), but still, it can provide some valuable insights on the influence of components surrounding a pickup, and save time too as a pre-soldering test stage. That's just my humble opinion.

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