LED clipper question.

Started by haveyouseenhim, April 19, 2014, 12:09:50 AM

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haveyouseenhim

I was just wondering if instead of using two LEDs for clipping, would a single bi-color led work? What I'm referring to is the bi-colors with two leads. I have one that has a green and yellow diode with almost the same forward voltage that I figure might work.
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I'm sorry sir, we only have the regular ohms.

PRR

> I have one

So put it in and tell us.
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haveyouseenhim

It's on a fabbed board that isn't anywhere near done. I was just wondering.

Thanks for your help ::)
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I'm sorry sir, we only have the regular ohms.

pappasmurfsharem

Quote from: haveyouseenhim on April 19, 2014, 12:09:50 AMI was just wondering if instead of using two LEDs for clipping, would a single bi-color led work? What I'm referring to is the bi-colors with two leads. I have one that has a green and yellow diode with almost the same forward voltage that I figure might work.

It would need 4 legs wouldn't it?

Otherwise one diode will be shorted or it would be the same as two in parallel I guess
"I want to build a delay, but I don't have the time."

haveyouseenhim

Quote from: pappasmurfsharem on April 19, 2014, 01:30:52 AM
It would need 4 legs wouldn't it?

Otherwise one diode will be shorted or it would be the same as two in parallel I guess

It seems to be two in parallel like in a clipping section. I'm just wondering if anyone has used it before, and it if works well.
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I'm sorry sir, we only have the regular ohms.

pappasmurfsharem

Quote from: haveyouseenhim on April 19, 2014, 01:38:02 AM
Quote from: pappasmurfsharem on April 19, 2014, 01:30:52 AMIt would need 4 legs wouldn't it?

Otherwise one diode will be shorted or it would be the same as two in parallel I guess

It seems to be two in parallel like in a clipping section. I'm just wondering if anyone has used it before, and it if works well.

Yes parallel but it would only clip one half if the waveform. Since both cathod leads or anode depending on the led would be on the same side. So it would work but you'd need another diode in anti parallel( if that is the correct term) to clip the other half of the waveform

Since most of these LEDs share a common anode or cathode. Unless it has 4 lega
"I want to build a delay, but I don't have the time."

haveyouseenhim

They are anti parallel. If I put power to it it shows one color. When I reverse the polarity it shows the other color.
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I'm sorry sir, we only have the regular ohms.

pappasmurfsharem

Quote from: haveyouseenhim on April 19, 2014, 02:14:52 AM
They are anti parallel. If I put power to it it shows one color. When I reverse the polarity it shows the other color.

Ooo it's not a common cathode/anode type then fancy.

Throw it to ground after a booster and see if it clips both sides. :)
"I want to build a delay, but I don't have the time."

samhay

The bicolour LEDs with 2 legs work great anywhere you would use antiparallel clipping diodes. They are often my preference if I want asymmetric clipping LEDS.

Edit - yes, they clip both sides.
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zintolo

Done, they work perfectly and of course they clip both sides, asymmetricaly.

chi_boy

Sounds like a neat trick; I haven't run into those yet.  Where did you find them?  A link perhaps?
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haveyouseenhim

I found a few on a gutted mixer board. I figured they might work. I just don't have anything built at the moment to test it on.
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I'm sorry sir, we only have the regular ohms.

boogietone

Quote from: pappasmurfsharem on April 19, 2014, 02:18:23 AM
Quote from: haveyouseenhim on April 19, 2014, 02:14:52 AM
They are anti parallel. If I put power to it it shows one color. When I reverse the polarity it shows the other color.

Ooo it's not a common cathode/anode type then fancy.

Throw it to ground after a booster and see if it clips both sides. :)

I think it would be this. Anode - cathode for one color. Cathode - anode for the other.
An oxymoron - clean transistor boost.

Jdansti

Quote from: haveyouseenhim on April 19, 2014, 06:06:02 PM
I found a few on a gutted mixer board. I figured they might work. I just don't have anything built at the moment to test it on.

I think you made a Valvecaster. Tie the bi-LED between the Valvecaster's output and ground. You could do this from the output jack and not have to open up the enclosure. Turn the Valvecaster's gain down so you only hear clipping from the diode. You could do this with any high gain pedal. I've got a passive clipping box with several diode types that does the same thing.
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