Hi everybody!
I recently stumbled upon a Vox Wah, ( belonging to a friend ) which has been sitting, left aside for decades, in a garage....
The unit looks like a late 60s/early 70s one, my bet would be on a Dallas/Arbiter pattern, built for Vox by Jen in Italy ( ARCO and Ducati capacitors inside ).
Needless to say, the unit needs some TLC to be brought in full working order, so I opened it, and.....surprise, surprise, the original schematic is still on the back of the rear cover.... the paper's yellowed with age, and there are some stains due to humidity, but the schematic is still perfectly readable! I though it would have been good to post it here, so I scanned it at a very high resolution and converted it to jpg.
Interestingly, the inductor value's not indicated, anyway, it's the standard 500 mH one ( black ).
Can't help myself feeling an archeologist ( sort of an Indiana Jones with a soldering iron instead of a handgun ) when I have the luck of finding things like this, so I thought it was a good thing to share this find of mine with my "fellows solder fume breathers" ( credits to enzo ).
Cheers
Bob
P.S. - Being a 40 years old design, I don't think I'm infringing any copyright by posting the schematic ( after all there already are TONS of schematics on the internet ), but, should this be the case, I kindly ask tboy to remove this post.
I recently stumbled upon a Vox Wah, ( belonging to a friend ) which has been sitting, left aside for decades, in a garage....
The unit looks like a late 60s/early 70s one, my bet would be on a Dallas/Arbiter pattern, built for Vox by Jen in Italy ( ARCO and Ducati capacitors inside ).
Needless to say, the unit needs some TLC to be brought in full working order, so I opened it, and.....surprise, surprise, the original schematic is still on the back of the rear cover.... the paper's yellowed with age, and there are some stains due to humidity, but the schematic is still perfectly readable! I though it would have been good to post it here, so I scanned it at a very high resolution and converted it to jpg.
Interestingly, the inductor value's not indicated, anyway, it's the standard 500 mH one ( black ).
Can't help myself feeling an archeologist ( sort of an Indiana Jones with a soldering iron instead of a handgun ) when I have the luck of finding things like this, so I thought it was a good thing to share this find of mine with my "fellows solder fume breathers" ( credits to enzo ).
Cheers
Bob
P.S. - Being a 40 years old design, I don't think I'm infringing any copyright by posting the schematic ( after all there already are TONS of schematics on the internet ), but, should this be the case, I kindly ask tboy to remove this post.
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