hi all. i have been spending some time lately looking a bunch of schematics, looking at their differences and similarities and trying to better understand how the different parts interconnect.
(disclaimer) im still a major newb when it comes to electronics, so i have tried to find as many answers as i can by reading on sites like merlin's tone wizard, and aiken's site before coming over here and bothering you fellas. i think im understanding things correctly, but im hoping the experts here can help me out with some questions i have.
1] from what i understand, common hi/lo inputs are basically a voltage divider between 1m to ground and 68k to grid for hi input, and 68k to ground and 68k to grid for lo input.
if you were to use only one input jack, but still wanted hi/lo capability, could you use a switch to jump between 1m, and a resistor matching the resistor at the grid?
is this correct?
2]in the example of the above attachments, one has cap off the plate going to a gain pot to ground, then to a resistor into the grid. the other has a cap off the plate, to a resistor, then to a gain pot to ground connected to the grid.
my question is does it matter what side of the grounded resistor/pot the other resistor is? or, does it matter if the grid sees the grounded resistor? from what i have read, there is a slight drop in gain (minor) when the grounded resistor is on the grid side as opposed to the other side... but otherwise would it have pretty much the same effect regardless of which side?
3] if im understanding this correctly, is the 470k resistor not in parallel with the 500k pot to ground meaning that the pot essentially has a range 0-250k? if so, then why not just use a 250k pot? or is there something else going on there? if not, then what is the purpose of 2 resistors to ground?
thanks for your help guys, any feedback is greatly appreciated.
(disclaimer) im still a major newb when it comes to electronics, so i have tried to find as many answers as i can by reading on sites like merlin's tone wizard, and aiken's site before coming over here and bothering you fellas. i think im understanding things correctly, but im hoping the experts here can help me out with some questions i have.
1] from what i understand, common hi/lo inputs are basically a voltage divider between 1m to ground and 68k to grid for hi input, and 68k to ground and 68k to grid for lo input.
if you were to use only one input jack, but still wanted hi/lo capability, could you use a switch to jump between 1m, and a resistor matching the resistor at the grid?
is this correct?
2]in the example of the above attachments, one has cap off the plate going to a gain pot to ground, then to a resistor into the grid. the other has a cap off the plate, to a resistor, then to a gain pot to ground connected to the grid.
my question is does it matter what side of the grounded resistor/pot the other resistor is? or, does it matter if the grid sees the grounded resistor? from what i have read, there is a slight drop in gain (minor) when the grounded resistor is on the grid side as opposed to the other side... but otherwise would it have pretty much the same effect regardless of which side?
3] if im understanding this correctly, is the 470k resistor not in parallel with the 500k pot to ground meaning that the pot essentially has a range 0-250k? if so, then why not just use a 250k pot? or is there something else going on there? if not, then what is the purpose of 2 resistors to ground?
thanks for your help guys, any feedback is greatly appreciated.
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