Let me start by saying, the root of this goes back a ways (Ampage ala 2002 )for the schematic that I believe originated there (thanks again to the fine folks like Robert Strand, Erik Robertson and BoyHowdy among others)!
Aside: I don't get the Korg reference on the schem, unless Westbury was a sub-brand for them at the time. I've never seen a Korg labelled unit like this. Feel free to shed knowledge/light on that as well if anyone has it!
Also have to give a nod to both BugMeNot and 4Shared, as I was unable to source the resulting schem otherwise!
Putting it up here for not only reference, but others who might need it in times of trouble in the future.
On to the goal at hand. I've owned this pedal for nigh on 15 years (or better), and have always loved the basic character of the tone. However, it was always 'lackluster' in the bass department. And from what I've gleened on a few other forums, it's a concensus, and appears to be inherent in the design (as opposed to a defective/drifting component). Bottom line, after playing with it for a bit, it usually goes back into the closet in favor of another pedal with fuller range/usability. I'm tired of that happening since this is truly a great little pedal. It just needs to be tweaked.
Side note: It always struck me odd that they used a dual-gang 1M pot for the tone stack, as opposed to the more 'normal' 50k or 100k...they did the same in the Guyatone/Nady TD-1 (Westbury W-20) FWIW.
Anyways, the treble feels quite responsive, and am content with the amount of control that it provides (quite a long range actually!). However, given that, the Bass control is almost the opposite. Very limited in the overall frequency range, and very little difference in applied effect, though noting it's range/effect changes with regard to the gain setting.
Since changing only the bass pot is not an option, that area only leaves C4 as an "easy access" tuning point.
I was also considering changing C1 in the NFB loop. Also, what about the C3 bypass...?
Curious as well if C5/C6 may be a limiting factor.
Wondering what input you guys might have about a preferred point(s) of attack.
Also, any theory insights are welcome. I still have a lot to learn about tube theory! For instance, why such a large shift in bass response with dependancy on the gain setting (while fully understanding that R5/RV1B/C3 in essence form a tank ckt. It just doesn't seem like it would be as large a factor as it is.)
Or maybe, why didn't they move the bass control nearer the output like the treble?? Or both in the middle -between stage 1 and stage 2.
PS: please bear in mind my "deficiency" for certain terminology interpretation. If you say use a smaller/larger cap at loc. xx, please accompany it with a suggested value so I don't 'shift the definition' internally.
Aside: I don't get the Korg reference on the schem, unless Westbury was a sub-brand for them at the time. I've never seen a Korg labelled unit like this. Feel free to shed knowledge/light on that as well if anyone has it!
Also have to give a nod to both BugMeNot and 4Shared, as I was unable to source the resulting schem otherwise!
Putting it up here for not only reference, but others who might need it in times of trouble in the future.
On to the goal at hand. I've owned this pedal for nigh on 15 years (or better), and have always loved the basic character of the tone. However, it was always 'lackluster' in the bass department. And from what I've gleened on a few other forums, it's a concensus, and appears to be inherent in the design (as opposed to a defective/drifting component). Bottom line, after playing with it for a bit, it usually goes back into the closet in favor of another pedal with fuller range/usability. I'm tired of that happening since this is truly a great little pedal. It just needs to be tweaked.
Side note: It always struck me odd that they used a dual-gang 1M pot for the tone stack, as opposed to the more 'normal' 50k or 100k...they did the same in the Guyatone/Nady TD-1 (Westbury W-20) FWIW.
Anyways, the treble feels quite responsive, and am content with the amount of control that it provides (quite a long range actually!). However, given that, the Bass control is almost the opposite. Very limited in the overall frequency range, and very little difference in applied effect, though noting it's range/effect changes with regard to the gain setting.
Since changing only the bass pot is not an option, that area only leaves C4 as an "easy access" tuning point.
I was also considering changing C1 in the NFB loop. Also, what about the C3 bypass...?
Curious as well if C5/C6 may be a limiting factor.
Wondering what input you guys might have about a preferred point(s) of attack.
Also, any theory insights are welcome. I still have a lot to learn about tube theory! For instance, why such a large shift in bass response with dependancy on the gain setting (while fully understanding that R5/RV1B/C3 in essence form a tank ckt. It just doesn't seem like it would be as large a factor as it is.)
Or maybe, why didn't they move the bass control nearer the output like the treble?? Or both in the middle -between stage 1 and stage 2.
PS: please bear in mind my "deficiency" for certain terminology interpretation. If you say use a smaller/larger cap at loc. xx, please accompany it with a suggested value so I don't 'shift the definition' internally.
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