Just smth before we continue the previous subject. I am using this circuit to power up my pedal (with battery or DC jack switching when one is connected and other is not, you know):
Now, I am trying to make this work for ages, and for some reason it always refused to turn on the power with my battery (I've tried messing with the 6.3 input connector being connected or not; using only the battery; checking the connections; checking thousand times what are the pinouts of my 6.3 jack connector to make sure I don't make mistakes, etc).
For some godly reason, I happened to touch the battery - on the ground when the + was already connected to the switch, and IT WORKED!
So I'm thinking two things:
- The circuit I'm copying is wrong;
- I might be confusing the pinouts on the 6.3 connector
If the circuit is wrong, maybe what should be in place of the - battery on the ring is that - connected to the groud point of the DC switch and then on the ring, as some circuits on the internet suggest, am I right? I sincerely hope..
If you look closely at the plot the curves aren't smooth...
...You can see this in your second plot.
True! I must try to change the number of points, and see if it helps..
*However* in your case it might be a different problem because I can see there is jaggedness at 400Hz with wider frequency steps than at 40Hz...
... (It still could be the FFT settings if the equipment is using a log-spaced FFT, although this isn't very common.)
What do you mean with "So the jaggness has the same to the eye on the screen." ?
Anyway I'll try messing with the plot ponts and if it doesn't help, I'll go and try to mess with the FFT!
Feedback *does* mess with the notches...
...The way to check that would be in spice.
Pretty interesting! I might give it a try in Spice because I'll have to explain the working of the feedback as it is, so it would surely help.
I understand that it does affect the all pass working, because it is putting output signal on the - input of the 3rd all pass stage, so it's kinda amplifying what was in between notches.