Hello good people,
I'm having a real head-scratching time with a design that should be fairly simple, and I need some help understanding why it's not working, and, hopefully, finding out if there's any way I can make it work.
First, a little explanation...
I have a Maxon AD999 analog delay pedal that has two outputs (one for the dry signal, and one for the delayed signal). If you just plug into the delay out, it mixes the signals, but if you plug into both outputs, it keeps the signals seperated. I wanted to take advantage of this so that I could run the delayed signal through, say a phaser or chorus, and leave the dry signal unaffected. I realize that I could do this by using two amps, but I really don't want to have to lug two amps to every show every time I play. Plus that would mean that I wouldn't be able to run the two signals together to the same amp. So, I thought, hey, I'll build a little box that will act as a switchable splitter, that way I can enjoy the best of both worlds.
Here's a rough drawing of the unit I built...
Basically, when the switch is in position 1, the signals are split and the dry signal goes straight out, while the delay signal goes through any following effects before going to the output. When the switch is in position 2, the signals are mixed and go through the following effects together before hitting the output to the amp.
When I test it with a jumper cable between the effect out and the effect in (see below), it works like a charm.
BUT, once I hook up an actual pedal into the effects loop (see image below), it gets wonky. When the signals are mixed before going to the effect loop (switch in position 2), everything works just fine; however, when I split the signals (switch in position 1), the delay signal returns from the effect loop at regular strength, but the dry signal is very, very, very faint in the background.
I'm fairly new to electronics, so I'm sure there's something obvious that I'm missing (impedence mismatch maybe?) but I'm not advanced enough to figure out what it is, or, more importantly how to correct it. Anyone here feeling generous enough to explain my folly?
Any help appreciated.
I'm having a real head-scratching time with a design that should be fairly simple, and I need some help understanding why it's not working, and, hopefully, finding out if there's any way I can make it work.
First, a little explanation...
I have a Maxon AD999 analog delay pedal that has two outputs (one for the dry signal, and one for the delayed signal). If you just plug into the delay out, it mixes the signals, but if you plug into both outputs, it keeps the signals seperated. I wanted to take advantage of this so that I could run the delayed signal through, say a phaser or chorus, and leave the dry signal unaffected. I realize that I could do this by using two amps, but I really don't want to have to lug two amps to every show every time I play. Plus that would mean that I wouldn't be able to run the two signals together to the same amp. So, I thought, hey, I'll build a little box that will act as a switchable splitter, that way I can enjoy the best of both worlds.
Here's a rough drawing of the unit I built...
Basically, when the switch is in position 1, the signals are split and the dry signal goes straight out, while the delay signal goes through any following effects before going to the output. When the switch is in position 2, the signals are mixed and go through the following effects together before hitting the output to the amp.
When I test it with a jumper cable between the effect out and the effect in (see below), it works like a charm.
BUT, once I hook up an actual pedal into the effects loop (see image below), it gets wonky. When the signals are mixed before going to the effect loop (switch in position 2), everything works just fine; however, when I split the signals (switch in position 1), the delay signal returns from the effect loop at regular strength, but the dry signal is very, very, very faint in the background.
I'm fairly new to electronics, so I'm sure there's something obvious that I'm missing (impedence mismatch maybe?) but I'm not advanced enough to figure out what it is, or, more importantly how to correct it. Anyone here feeling generous enough to explain my folly?
Any help appreciated.
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