Fuzz Face clone "screams" when DC plug inserted

Started by Coelhomatias, September 15, 2018, 08:02:21 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Coelhomatias

Hi guys, I'm having a problem with my fuzz face clone, when on the battery it works really well and sounds very good, but as soon i insert the DC plug it makes a screaming noise that's terrible. I used this schematic to make the clone :
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Dq3PZC6Hx20/VGJO3swCsaI/AAAAAAAAC-Y/rmDcr6TsS9k/s1600/Fuzz%2BFace.png
and this one to maek the off board wirings :
https://diystrat.blogspot.com/2009/06/how-to-wire-up-stomp-box-effects-pedal.html
I don't know what's going on can you help me please?

thermionix

NPN silicon?  What kind of DC adapter?  Can you post pics?

amptramp

The Fuzz Face does not have any power supply filtering or even any bypass capacitors.  If you were running off a regulated DC supply, there would probably be no problem, since it works with a battery.  The Fuzz Face is notoriously sensitive to power supply impedance and quality.  Some DC power supplies are switching types that whine or provide low-quality power.

thermionix

My only wall wart is a rather noisy 1A Radio Shack SMPS type.  It works fine with some pedals in "stock" configuration, including Rat, Phase 90, CE-2, TS808, others.  It's too noisy to use with my (unmodified) Wah or Dynacomp.  It's quiet with my BMP after I added filtering.  It's still too noisy for my Fuzz Factory with the same added filtering.  Surprisingly, it works great with my Si NPN Fuzz Face, no added filtering.  Go figure.

Coelhomatias

Hi guys, thank you for replying! Yes it is a NPN build with the BC108 transistor. I used this DC jack:
https://www.musikding.de/DC-power-jack-21mm-isolated
And this circuit has filtering, i think that's what the 47uF capacitor is doing no?
Also i first used a 100uF one instead of the 47uF but then i replaced it and the problem continued so i don't know.

thermionix

You're right the 47uF has been added to the circuit for filtering.  It won't do much by itself though.  Add a small resistor in series to it (maybe 47 ohms or so, between the DC jack and the board) and a small ceramic cap (try 100n) in parallel with the 47uF.