Executive summary: Measure the DC voltages of all the op-amp outputs (wrt ground) If any of them is far away from 4.5V, you did something wrong.
I'd expect a guitar pedal (other than a distortion pedal of course) to take the output of a Les Paul without distorting. Humbuckers give a couple of volts peak-peak when played hard. So, it's just doable with a TL07x type chip running off a single 9V supply with unity gain: the output can get to within about 1.5V of the rails, so the maximum unclipped output is about 6V p-p.
If I was building an EQ pedal, I'd include a soft clipping circuit to prevent ugly op-amp clipping when a lot of boost was applied. For example, in my Ninja Toaster EQ, the gain stage is a tube, and the gain structure is arranged so it always clips before the op-amps do. When you apply boost you get tube distortion.
I'd expect a guitar pedal (other than a distortion pedal of course) to take the output of a Les Paul without distorting. Humbuckers give a couple of volts peak-peak when played hard. So, it's just doable with a TL07x type chip running off a single 9V supply with unity gain: the output can get to within about 1.5V of the rails, so the maximum unclipped output is about 6V p-p.
If I was building an EQ pedal, I'd include a soft clipping circuit to prevent ugly op-amp clipping when a lot of boost was applied. For example, in my Ninja Toaster EQ, the gain stage is a tube, and the gain structure is arranged so it always clips before the op-amps do. When you apply boost you get tube distortion.
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