Journal #6340

Posted 14 years ago2010-01-22 13:54:52 UTC
Tetsu0 Tetsu0Positive Chaos
Hey Twhlers.
My final semester of my 2year degree program started yesterday, and i was wondering if there's any Electronics Eggheads out there.

My final project is due in may, but we need to start it ASAP. My next class isn't 'til Thursday (when the final designs have to be in and approved), and i just stayed up til 3AM getting the first part of this working in the simulation software...

Anyway, I'm an Electronic Engineering student, and my final project is going to be a guitar pedal.

It has 2 main parts to it. 1) Distortion 2) Tremolo effect

I got the distortion down, it was as simple as using 1 BJT and a reversed-pair of low-power diodes to clip the output waveform... and a potentiometer to control the amount of gain etc etc...
User posted image
But i'm having trouble doing the tremolo. I want to use a 555-Timer to power on and off an op-amp with a gain of 1.

I have the timer set perfectly within the time ranges i want (1hz - 60hz) and i even have a pulsing LED to show the timing. But i can't for the life of me figure out the op-amp....
User posted image
If anyone knows which op-amp would be good to use with a 9V supply, and if i really need a positive and negative input or can i just use a +9 and a GND input on the - input?

Idk... Well i have almost another whole week to figure this out, but if anyone could help, it'd be amazing....

8 Comments

Commented 14 years ago2010-01-22 14:02:38 UTC Comment #48961
You kind of lost me on paragraph 5, but hey, a guitar pedal? Sweet, hope you figure it out. :]
Commented 14 years ago2010-01-22 15:57:55 UTC Comment #48964
I graduated from secondary school as an Electronics Technician (which I explain would be sort of a half-Engineer to those who ask me what that is) Although I'm more specialised in digital environments.

I feel I have to ask you, why exactly a toggling op-amp, wouldn't you prefer it powered more like a sine wave? At least that's what I'd expect from a tremolo effect-er.
Commented 14 years ago2010-01-22 16:46:15 UTC Comment #48963
oh how I would like to know a lot of things about these things like you do and be able to have things like this around the house :(
Commented 14 years ago2010-01-23 00:31:20 UTC Comment #48962
Tetsu0, i don't understand what you wrote up there (is it Chinese?), but i wish you the best of luck with your final project!

)

Commented 14 years ago2010-01-23 02:03:35 UTC Comment #48959
@ discostu - It's really meant to be an intermittent signal to the amp. I guess it could be a sine wave, but i also found another schematic online that actually accomplishes exactly what i wanted to do.

In other news, my 9" fan shorted out and the wires got so hot they un-soldered themselves..... therefore i'm down to only a 120mm output fan until i get my hands on a new iron.. >.<
Commented 14 years ago2010-01-23 02:36:32 UTC Comment #48965
A sine wave is the way I'd imagine any implementation of the effect. Of course, I might be wrong, as I don't even have a tremolo pedal to check.

What do you use to draw the circuits?

Heh. I used a computer power supply 80mm fan in hot summer days a couple of years ago. Then I turned the voltage dial on my custom-made power supply too far, and something burned out in it. I'm on the look for a new one. The 20" standing fan should do well meanwhile.
Commented 14 years ago2010-01-23 12:31:57 UTC Comment #48960
I'm using Multisim 11 for the prototyping. And the main reason it's not a sine wave is because a function generator would be much more expensive to build...
I do believe you can get a triangle wave out of a 555 timer... maybe i can look into that. But it has to wait until Monday because the trial edition has a watered down parts list... it doesn't have the low-power op-amp i need.
Commented 14 years ago2010-01-23 15:08:53 UTC Comment #48966
Maybe triangular could do the trick too. I think I had built a triangle wave generator with a 555 in my early years of school. A friend asked to borrow it to do something similar, and never returned it. At this point, almost a decade later, I assume my notes on it lost, and he moved far, far away where I can't demand my circuit board back. Where was I going? Right, I don't think I'll be able to reproduce the setup just from memory.

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