I made a full blown clone of the Colorsound wah shell so I could get an accurate sounding Colorsound inductorless wah pedal, with the cam and all. Did it just for the heck of it. You can see video here if interested
What final values did you end up using?
I've got this schematic which I believe John Lyons drew up based on "nirvanas silence"'s info in an old thread:

I'm pretty sure the 10nF input and output caps are correct.
The value I still dispute is the 5M7 resistor.
I've looked at a few boards and I see 3M3 in that position more often that not. I suspect 5M7 is actually a misread 2M7, which is close to 3M3.
The thing about using 3M3 is the biasing tends to suit a generic 2N3904 transistor more than the commonly quoted 2N5088. More than likely the actual transistors were generic BCxxx types such as those used on the inductored Colorsound Wahs. Like it could be that the transistor is deliberately biased with a slightly lower VC in order to get more gain out of the stage.
Another missing piece of info is the Wah pot taper.
I know, I'm being a real gravedigger here, but I never got an email notification to your response... I've been revisiting my Colorsound Twin-T wah pedal, and stumbled on this thread doing an internet search for the schematic.

Have been modeling a bunch of wah circuits in LTSpice over the last week for fun, and thought it would be interesting to do the Colorsound "inductorless" circuit. So as in my Ebow quest, while I was trying to verify what the actual circuit is I found things that don't make sense. I have never really been satisfied with the sound of mine and have wondered if I did something wrong or if the values I used per these internet schematics were wrong. It appears to me that most of these schematics on the internet are wrong. I found pictures of an original PCB today and drew it up in CAD. While I can't make out all of the resistor values, it seems to me that the 0.015uF and 0.0068uF caps on these schematics need to switch places. I only discovered that today after I traced out the PCB backside vs the components on the top side. I was also looking at it logically, it just didn't seem to me like there would be much change happening between a 0.0022uF cap and .0068uF cap at the output to the pot. When I swapped those two caps this evening it was a MAJOR improvement.
Here are a few other things that in my experience don't really work:
1- 330K input resistor too big. I used 3.3K. Maybe 33K would be OK, but I stuck with the 3.3K
2 - The resistor between base and collector - for the 2N5089 I am using, the 5.7M was just too big. I don't have 3.3M on hand but a 2.2M seems to be good value.
3 - I used 220K series resistor on the output. 100K kills the output just a little too much.
4 - Putting it into a Crybaby type shell. The Colorsound wah uses that interesting linkage system, that according to Gagan, was to produce a log taper response from a linear pot. I don't know if that's true or not but it does get quite a bit of the pot's rotation vs. that rack and pinion arrangement of the Crybaby type shell. That was one reason why I built that one in the YouTube video linked above out of wood and aluminum, so I could reproduce that whole arrangement.
5 - 0.1uF input/output caps are incorrect. Per the pics of the original PCB they are 0.01uF. My personal experience confirms that 0.1uF caps don't work very well.
For the pot I used, I don't remember a specific model number but it's a blue plastic Bourns sealed 100K linear pot. Seems to be quite at home in my DIY replica shell.
I've been having trouble trying to model the full circuit in LTSpice... I can really only sim the filter section (probably my own ignorance), but it was pretty obvious when I swapped those caps in the program that it would be an improvement - and it turned out to be matched by real world results. These are my preliminary findings, I may still tweak something. I'm going to use it the AM while doing my normal routine and see how it fares. It's now competing directly with my 60s Italian Vox wah with the
original red Fasel inductor. That is my most vocal wah pedal.
