I was talking with regard to a replacement for the one in the reverb circuit. Which is installed with the common center connection not used.
Meaning there was no real need for the use of a dual LDR there. A 4-leg single would have worked just fine rather than the 5-leg dual.
I question whether there was an actual "need" for the use of the duals at all. Other than it was a parts saving move. You want to switch 2 circuits at the same time. Doing that with 1 part rather than 2 would save on parts count, & likely some PCB real-estate to boot. (x2 in the case of the pump circuit switching).
But, as I said, we're not talking about a stereo compressor here. Given the application, does it really matter in this case if say the ground for the "smooth" switch acted a few millisconds faster/slower than the ground for the master volume? (LDR2 in a Rockmaster)
Would not 2 single LDRs with the LEDs wired in parallel work just as well in that spot?
This would all be a moot point if I could get Peavey to get back to me & take my credit card number.
Meaning there was no real need for the use of a dual LDR there. A 4-leg single would have worked just fine rather than the 5-leg dual.
I question whether there was an actual "need" for the use of the duals at all. Other than it was a parts saving move. You want to switch 2 circuits at the same time. Doing that with 1 part rather than 2 would save on parts count, & likely some PCB real-estate to boot. (x2 in the case of the pump circuit switching).
But, as I said, we're not talking about a stereo compressor here. Given the application, does it really matter in this case if say the ground for the "smooth" switch acted a few millisconds faster/slower than the ground for the master volume? (LDR2 in a Rockmaster)
Would not 2 single LDRs with the LEDs wired in parallel work just as well in that spot?
This would all be a moot point if I could get Peavey to get back to me & take my credit card number.
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