As Alex said, the op amp is in the reverb circuit, as is the JFET - NOT the signal path. Turn the reverb down - as if you could hear the transistorness of the reverb anyway - and it has ZERO effect on the tone.
As we both said, the 6534 is the loop send driver, and is NOT part of the signal path unless you use the loop. I have my glasses on, pal, you fouled up the part number of the transistor.
Note that the circuit through Q2 goes only to the send jack, nowhere else. And note that the reverb circuit is a branch off the signal path, so when not in use, the reverb circuit has NO effect on the sound. Stating something like Q2 is in the signal path no matter what is simply wrong, as the schematic plainly shows.
The interesting quality of a JFET is that just sitting there it acts like a low value resistor until you turn it OFF via its gate. About 150-200 ohms is a common figure. The JFET in this sort of switching application then becomes either a series resistor or an open. It does not amplify, add gain, or any of that, it just passes signal through that low resistance. Considering that it feeds a 10k pot, the extra couple hundred ohms in series will not have an audible effect.
Mykey suggests we remove the transistors and listen. OK. One difference we hear is the effects send no longer functions, but the sound of the amp remains unchanged. The other difference we hear is that the reverb no longer functions, but the sound of the amp remains unchanged. Replace Q1 with a 200 ohm resistor, and the reverb will function again, and it will sound exactly like it did before.
As for the Mykey philosophy, I'd say dogma is for wimps.
As we both said, the 6534 is the loop send driver, and is NOT part of the signal path unless you use the loop. I have my glasses on, pal, you fouled up the part number of the transistor.
Note that the circuit through Q2 goes only to the send jack, nowhere else. And note that the reverb circuit is a branch off the signal path, so when not in use, the reverb circuit has NO effect on the sound. Stating something like Q2 is in the signal path no matter what is simply wrong, as the schematic plainly shows.
The interesting quality of a JFET is that just sitting there it acts like a low value resistor until you turn it OFF via its gate. About 150-200 ohms is a common figure. The JFET in this sort of switching application then becomes either a series resistor or an open. It does not amplify, add gain, or any of that, it just passes signal through that low resistance. Considering that it feeds a 10k pot, the extra couple hundred ohms in series will not have an audible effect.
Mykey suggests we remove the transistors and listen. OK. One difference we hear is the effects send no longer functions, but the sound of the amp remains unchanged. The other difference we hear is that the reverb no longer functions, but the sound of the amp remains unchanged. Replace Q1 with a 200 ohm resistor, and the reverb will function again, and it will sound exactly like it did before.
As for the Mykey philosophy, I'd say dogma is for wimps.
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