Many pedal effect like use SMT components. But some one think SMT components would effect the sound of pedal and make sound bad. which one is right?
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Does SMT components effect the sound of pedal
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Hi,
one of the main problems is not related to the nature of components, but rather to the increased "density" of PCBs, and the consequent increase of stray ( parasitic ) capacitance. Stray capacitance can shunt some of the higher frequencies to ground, or cause self-oscillation in a high gain stage. In the first case the loss is caused by the stray capacitance itself, in the second case losses are due to the need to add NFB loops to prevent self-oscillation.
All in all, I prefer "old fashioned" stompboxes, except when the effect's complexity forces me to move towards SMD-based devices.
Hope this helps
Best regards
BobHoc unum scio: me nihil scire.
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A good designer can take the layout parasitics into account, or make them negligible, and so get any sound he wants with either through-hole or SMT. However, bear in mind the following:
Some parts are not available in SMT (germanium transistors and tubes for instance )
Some parts are ONLY available in SMT
Pedal modders hate SMT because it's harder to mod
Joe Public believes that SMT sounds worse even if there's no evidence for it (so maybe you want to use through hole purely for marketing reasons)"Enzo, I see that you replied parasitic oscillations. Is that a hypothesis? Or is that your amazing metal band I should check out?"
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Do not confuse SMT components, and the production techniques which use them. SMT assembly techniques can reduce production costs, so you tend to find SMT parts in many (but not only) low cost pedals like Behringer. The fact that they use such parts is separate from the decisions they make about which parts to use. For example, I bought a Behringer AC-2 clone. It is almost identical to the Boss pedal except that Behringer uses TL064 opamps, which are not the lowest noise available. For a pedal that boosts the treble to produce an acoustic simulation, this is a bad move.
As well, the "heart" of any IC is many times smaller than the actual plastic package. So, while an SMT device may seem more fragile, the actual amount of silicon involved may be about the same. This is, of course, why a company can offer the same chip in DIP and SMT format with the same specs.
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Originally posted by Mark Hammer View Postthe "heart" of any IC is many times smaller than the actual plastic package. So, while an SMT device may seem more fragile, the actual amount of silicon involved may be about the same. This is, of course, why a company can offer the same chip in DIP and SMT format with the same specs.
Unfortunately, we live in an era dominated by cost-cutting and marketing considerations, and I agree with Steve that probably most of the "mojo factor" is in the people's ( "Joe Public's" ) mind, but, if this is the case, we're guilty too, because we keep on building hand-wired-point-to-point tube amps instead of using PCBs
Call me romantic, but all this "modern stuff" around don't even come close to my 1964 AC30TB, my 1966 UL4120 or my '59 Bassman.
Cheers
BobHoc unum scio: me nihil scire.
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YES, i MAINLY CAUSE STRAY capacitance
Originally posted by Robert M. Martinelli View PostHi,
one of the main problems is not related to the nature of components, but rather to the increased "density" of PCBs, and the consequent increase of stray ( parasitic ) capacitance. Stray capacitance can shunt some of the higher frequencies to ground, or cause self-oscillation in a high gain stage. In the first case the loss is caused by the stray capacitance itself, in the second case losses are due to the need to add NFB loops to prevent self-oscillation.
All in all, I prefer "old fashioned" stompboxes, except when the effect's complexity forces me to move towards SMD-based devices.
Hope this helps
Best regards
Bob
about hand-wire tube and PCB Tube amp, maybe different.
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