I'm puttin up my super cool mod to the board for critique. A bit of background and then the mod.
I play my pedal steel through my "deluxe reverb" in an Americana band, which is cool since it's got all the headroom I need for small gigs, and is small enough to not resent at shows where there's mics, monitors and the like. It's a "dr" in that it's a bit worked over rebuild of a RI chassis and cab, which is to say basically a worked over torres kit amp, which has functioned nearly flawlessly since fire up about 7 years ago. It's awesome. it's fundamentally ab763.
However, my band requires my frequent use of my "long" reverb tank. In practice, reaching back to turn the knob from 2 to about 8 and back is easy, and at a lil bar, it's doable- but at a club, can't do. Can't rely on the reach, and if the knob ends up at, 2.75, instead of 2 to 2.25, it's mud city. I need a remote reverb- and not just a pedal, but a control for the awesome reverb that's there, but one thats real simple, doesn't need a unique cable, and leaves the fundamental tone of the amp untouched. This is what I came up with last night at practice.
It's pretty obvious I'm either gonna need a pile of cables, or a way to control it with 2 wires- the vactrol on my desk seems to seem just right. So instrument cable, and leave it untouched when not there. I whipped up a box with 4-AAA, a 10k-a I found on an old sub amp chassis, a 120 ohm resistor and a single pole switch. The 10ka pot pulls a vactrol vtlc1 very smoothly through it's useful range, although i'm guessing a 25ka would let you get a little more useful range on the low.
First, I tried the vactrol across the wiper and top of the reverb pot. I knew it wouldn't be perfect, but it took about 2 minutes to try. works, sort of- got about 3 more db reverb out of it, according to the eye on the db meter method of measuring. No real point in real measurements, there was only one result that counted: reverb like no tomorrow. That's not gonna fly. So, i say, ok, i'll cheat the voltage divider 470K and..... definitely boost of reverb, but too much path to ground swamped the dry signal and it seemed like the reverb sounded meh. Lost overall volume and too much noise. Not pro. No matter what way I looked at it, that 100k pot, and it's position interacted too much with the signal. (in retrospect, i may have got some traction by simply swapping the wiper and top of the pot around)
So, I pulled the signal off the .003- the reverb recovery plate cap, where the signal comes from. I formed a voltage divider with the vactrol and a 1M resistor, with the signal to the center tap. That kept the change in output impedance minimal on the reverb stage. I finally had a variable reverb signal that didn't fuck up the initial tone! To save some of your time (you're still reading?) I simply disconnected the lead from the "normal" jack (it's a grounding jack, and with a dummy plug in it hummed) and connected my signal to a fresh 47k grid-stopper at the input triode of the first stage. I popped a 220k grid resistor on it after I decided 1M was noisy. This part may be redundant, and the 220k probably changed the reverb circuit impedance somewhat but I couldn't hear it. It definitely quieted down a bit with the change.
BADABING! first shot, "functioned" exactly as hoped! An hour of tuning, futzing and lead dress later, sweet sweet remote knob, but sounded much better, with the additional EQ!
I drew y'all a picture!
iMod reverb.pdf
I play my pedal steel through my "deluxe reverb" in an Americana band, which is cool since it's got all the headroom I need for small gigs, and is small enough to not resent at shows where there's mics, monitors and the like. It's a "dr" in that it's a bit worked over rebuild of a RI chassis and cab, which is to say basically a worked over torres kit amp, which has functioned nearly flawlessly since fire up about 7 years ago. It's awesome. it's fundamentally ab763.
However, my band requires my frequent use of my "long" reverb tank. In practice, reaching back to turn the knob from 2 to about 8 and back is easy, and at a lil bar, it's doable- but at a club, can't do. Can't rely on the reach, and if the knob ends up at, 2.75, instead of 2 to 2.25, it's mud city. I need a remote reverb- and not just a pedal, but a control for the awesome reverb that's there, but one thats real simple, doesn't need a unique cable, and leaves the fundamental tone of the amp untouched. This is what I came up with last night at practice.
It's pretty obvious I'm either gonna need a pile of cables, or a way to control it with 2 wires- the vactrol on my desk seems to seem just right. So instrument cable, and leave it untouched when not there. I whipped up a box with 4-AAA, a 10k-a I found on an old sub amp chassis, a 120 ohm resistor and a single pole switch. The 10ka pot pulls a vactrol vtlc1 very smoothly through it's useful range, although i'm guessing a 25ka would let you get a little more useful range on the low.
First, I tried the vactrol across the wiper and top of the reverb pot. I knew it wouldn't be perfect, but it took about 2 minutes to try. works, sort of- got about 3 more db reverb out of it, according to the eye on the db meter method of measuring. No real point in real measurements, there was only one result that counted: reverb like no tomorrow. That's not gonna fly. So, i say, ok, i'll cheat the voltage divider 470K and..... definitely boost of reverb, but too much path to ground swamped the dry signal and it seemed like the reverb sounded meh. Lost overall volume and too much noise. Not pro. No matter what way I looked at it, that 100k pot, and it's position interacted too much with the signal. (in retrospect, i may have got some traction by simply swapping the wiper and top of the pot around)
So, I pulled the signal off the .003- the reverb recovery plate cap, where the signal comes from. I formed a voltage divider with the vactrol and a 1M resistor, with the signal to the center tap. That kept the change in output impedance minimal on the reverb stage. I finally had a variable reverb signal that didn't fuck up the initial tone! To save some of your time (you're still reading?) I simply disconnected the lead from the "normal" jack (it's a grounding jack, and with a dummy plug in it hummed) and connected my signal to a fresh 47k grid-stopper at the input triode of the first stage. I popped a 220k grid resistor on it after I decided 1M was noisy. This part may be redundant, and the 220k probably changed the reverb circuit impedance somewhat but I couldn't hear it. It definitely quieted down a bit with the change.
BADABING! first shot, "functioned" exactly as hoped! An hour of tuning, futzing and lead dress later, sweet sweet remote knob, but sounded much better, with the additional EQ!
I drew y'all a picture!
iMod reverb.pdf
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