I built a 2-channel (footswitchable) amp years ago that's very loosely based on the SLO. I just based it on the switching I saw somewhere else and fudged it from there...not really knowing what I was doing. I used a total of 4 Vactrols (P/N: VTL5C1) and used the 5v rectifier filament winding for my switching power supply, bridge rectified. All 4 Vactrols are ON/OFF at the same time...all 4 ON (dirty) or all 4 OFF (clean). I've only got about 5vdc at the rectifier...and after I've filtered it/ground referenced it/etc. it's only about 2vdc with all four Vactrols running (this 2vdc is what is connected to all four anodes of the LEDs). The cathodes of all 4 LEDs go to ground through a 22ohm resistor and I'm only getting about 3.5mA current per LED...so I've still got some resistance in the photocell but it looks to be <1K ohms.
Questions:
The amp sounds great...switching seems to work pretty well (there is an extremely quick 'surge' in volume when switching from dirty to clean but it's not really that bad)...so should I even worry that I'm not really running these Vactrols 'hot' enough to get the photcell resistance way down?
Any guesses on why it 'surges' when switching from dirty to clean? FYI...two Vactrols 'add' the dirty channel to the clean channel (one at the input and one at the 'summed' output), one Vactrol shunts the clean channel output to ground, and the fourth one connects the ground of the pre-PI MV (it's 'lifted' in clean mode)...I think it's that last one that is responsible for the surge. Is there an easy way to speed up (or slow down) one Vactrol relative to the others?
Do I even need a resistor between the LED cathodes and ground? It seems that maybe it was for reducing current but I don't think I could burn them up with only 2vdc...the spec sheet for these Vactrols says the minimum photocell resistance (~200ohm) occurs at about 40mA per Vactrol...but even at only 10mA it's still only ~600ohm.
Questions:
The amp sounds great...switching seems to work pretty well (there is an extremely quick 'surge' in volume when switching from dirty to clean but it's not really that bad)...so should I even worry that I'm not really running these Vactrols 'hot' enough to get the photcell resistance way down?
Any guesses on why it 'surges' when switching from dirty to clean? FYI...two Vactrols 'add' the dirty channel to the clean channel (one at the input and one at the 'summed' output), one Vactrol shunts the clean channel output to ground, and the fourth one connects the ground of the pre-PI MV (it's 'lifted' in clean mode)...I think it's that last one that is responsible for the surge. Is there an easy way to speed up (or slow down) one Vactrol relative to the others?
Do I even need a resistor between the LED cathodes and ground? It seems that maybe it was for reducing current but I don't think I could burn them up with only 2vdc...the spec sheet for these Vactrols says the minimum photocell resistance (~200ohm) occurs at about 40mA per Vactrol...but even at only 10mA it's still only ~600ohm.
Comment