Tuesday, May 2, 2017

DOD 250 vs. Tube Screamer

Overdrives are so frustrating. Builders claim tubey tones when clipping diodes will never clip like a tube. Builders will say tubey when they mean warm and by warm, they'll mean mushy and undefined. I am very suggestible to buzzwords myself. I want transparent and tube-like and dynamic. But, I see the schematic and it boils down to a boost (with or without soft or hard clipping).

Overdrives are going to boil down mostly to a hard clipping 250 style or soft clipping Tube Screamer style op amp overdrives. The op amp boosts the signal. The clipping diodes shave off the top, bottom or both of the sound waves. This is not how a tube works. This does not sound like a tube. It does however distort the signal in a pleasing way. The differences of all the myriad ODs out there are due to passive component choices (e.g., big input capacitor for more low end), the inclusion or not of buffers, etc.

What follows is my own personal emotional response to these two types of op amp overdrives.

Shrimp13 DOD 250 Overdrive clone
SHRIMP13 DOD 250 Clone

DOD 250

So simple, an op amp boost with clipping diodes after the IC. It covers a wide territory from slight gain and boost to classic rock distortion tones. It is pretty warm (dull) at the low gain end and bright as you increase the gain. The input cap and op amps changed over the years. The op amp doesn't effect much sonically. Some might be quieter or have slightly different gain. The input cap, however, affects tone a lot. The larger cap allowed for more low end but also kind of farts/fizzes out a bit with low notes. Later versions had a smaller cap that tightened things up at the low end. I personally like that out of control low end for some guitars, single coil Fenders in general and Telecasters in specific. When I plug a Tele into a 250, I am inspired to play 70s riffs and blues solos until I forget what time it is. It has a tasty grit that scratches a certain tonal itch with perfection. With humbuckers I sense no deliciousness, more of a fizziness and harshness. For me, the 250 is THE OD for a Tele, a perfect match.

Shrimp13 Tube Screamer Overdrive Clone
SHRIMP13 Tube Screamer Clone


Tube Screamer

The Tube Screamer moves the clipping section to a loop within the op amp. The result to me is a blunted, boxed in, smoother grit with a lot of the clean lower frequencies coming through. It sounds like your clean signal is riding along with the overdriven signal. I guess this is a good thing for cutting through the mix, similar to the early Russian Muffs which strike me the same way, clean and fuzz separated in the sound. They hit the ears separately. For humbuckers I like an OD with Tube Screamer architecture but without buffers. Simpler is better. The Zen Drive comes to mind as a great humbucker friendly drive. It's bright enough to let some character come through the overdrive. I have had great luck with lower gain settings with PAF or Filtertron type 'buckers. Again, one might find himself sucked into a tonal flavor black hole only to emerge and realize everyone else has gone to bed.

Summary

I like 250s for Fenders and Tube Screamers for humbuckers and Filtertrons.




Wednesday, January 25, 2017

The Pink Secret Recipe Muff

This pedal came from me laying out a Muff on a breadboard and tweaking components for taste. The result is a nice tight Muff like a Ram's Head with more brightness when the gain is dialed back.


And this is what it sounds like!


A Foxey Lady

I acquired a Foxey Lady enclosure that had seen better days. What a great platform for hand wired Triangle Muff innards! I based this one on the 66 #11 schematic on the Kit Rae site but with more electrolytics caps like my '70. (I needed to replace all of these caps, unfortunately)


I used the Dougie board easily and reasonably found on eBay.


And mounted it in the Foxey Lady shell.


I had to drill the bottom to make the holes line up. I suspect these were not married parts in their previous life.


What does it sound like?