also, I've found that lower gain transistors works best for a Fuzz Face. additionally, set the amp so it's breaking up and the Fuzz Face will send it into orbit. if the amp is set clean, your fuzz will sound too weak.
I've build an NPN version of a Fuzz Face before with BC109s and also with 2N3904s. The BC109s are the classic silicon FF tone like Band Of Gypsies while the 2N3904s are much less gainy and closer to the old germanium tone.
I seem to recall that the most important transistor in getting the FF to sound good was the 2nd one. I was using a 2N3904 (or 2N3906 if its a PNP version) for the first transistor with a germanium transistor for Q2.
Instead of connecting Q1's emitter straight to ground, a small resistor up to around 470R works well (credit where its due - I got this idea from Joe Gagan's NVN pedals back when he was an Ampage regular in the early 2000s).
Its a circuit with the most mileage of any I've messed with - hence I still occasionally mess with it more than ten years on.
I've build an NPN version of a Fuzz Face before with BC109s and also with 2N3904s. The BC109s are the classic silicon FF tone like Band Of Gypsies while the 2N3904s are much less gainy and closer to the old germanium tone.
I seem to recall that the most important transistor in getting the FF to sound good was the 2nd one. I was using a 2N3904 (or 2N3906 if its a PNP version) for the first transistor with a germanium transistor for Q2.
Instead of connecting Q1's emitter straight to ground, a small resistor up to around 470R works well (credit where its due - I got this idea from Joe Gagan's NVN pedals back when he was an Ampage regular in the early 2000s).
Its a circuit with the most mileage of any I've messed with - hence I still occasionally mess with it more than ten years on.
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