I had a lateral though with this and tried re-scaling the resistors to reduce noise. I now have the 270R resistors in both legs, but have reduced the input resistors R to 1k5 and K3R to 1k8. At these values the 270R resistors really make a difference to noise and are pretty much the ideal value. I also installed a bypass switch to A-B the circuit. To get around the signal loading I've used the spare half of the opamp as an input buffer, with 1M input resistance. The noise level has dropped significantly and the circuit attenuates nicely with no discernible bleedthrough. I installed a bypass switch and experimented with resistors to get near unity gain (thought there is a very slight overall boost). I'm now pleased with the results and intend building it into an old wah shell.
The noise level is such that the residual noise under full attenuation is lower than the pickup noise from the guitar when at full output. I think when it's built up on a PCB and with short leads inside a metal shell it will be even better.
The circuit is sensitive to FET and resistor matching, otherwise there can be bleedthough if random parts are selected.
The noise level is such that the residual noise under full attenuation is lower than the pickup noise from the guitar when at full output. I think when it's built up on a PCB and with short leads inside a metal shell it will be even better.
The circuit is sensitive to FET and resistor matching, otherwise there can be bleedthough if random parts are selected.
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