How to wire a clipping switch

Started by mateusborges, June 07, 2021, 06:10:36 PM

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mateusborges

Hello again guys.
Sorry if this isn't the right place for this topic.

I want to say again thanks for all the info and help available in this forum, I have learned and evolved a lot thanks to it!

I need some light into designing a clipping switch for my projects, I already wired one and it seems to be ok, but everytime I look at it something tells me there's something wrong with it, so I here I am.

I made a simple draw of how I wired the switch for easier understanding and question is, does it works as it should selecting between pairs of diodes? Or I got something wrong?



Thanks in advance!

idy

That is perfectly legit. Those of us who have experimented with diode clipping at some point hook up a rotary switch with some likely combos and switch back and forth until we find what sounds best with different circuits. It makes a handy tool, put it in a small can or something.

mateusborges

Quote from: idy on June 07, 2021, 06:19:09 PM
That is perfectly legit. Those of us who have experimented with diode clipping at some point hook up a rotary switch with some likely combos and switch back and forth until we find what sounds best with different circuits. It makes a handy tool, put it in a small can or something.

Cool! Thanks! My doubt arose when I started asking myself if any of the other diodes wouldn't interact for being connected at the end, before going into the PCB.

PRR

Maybe I mis-understand, but...

> other diodes wouldn't interact for being connected at the end

A wire, or a rope, has two ends. If it had only one end, or only one end is connected, it won't work.

Diodes (everything) need both ends.
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mateusborges

Ok, I know it's hard to believe but it have no shorts! \o/
And it's working!






So, what we have here it's supposed to be a 8-way clipping switch.
They're all in an asymmetrical setup.

Question, I'm trying to figure out a way of adding one switch to jumper the 3rd diode of each set to make a sym/asym toggle.
Something like this...


It's really hard trying to explain.
Thanks for all the help!

antonis

Quote from: mateusborges on June 10, 2021, 03:57:15 PM
It's really hard trying to explain.

If so, it should be really harder to get an answer.. :icon_wink:
"I'm getting older while being taught all the time" Solon the Athenian..
"I don't mind  being taught all the time but I do mind a lot getting old" Antonis the Thessalonian..

idy

I think you need a four pole toggle. Or foot switch... 4p2t. You've got it.

The other choice is to just use more diodes on the rotary. symmetric and assymetric as different groups. Diodes are cheap....

mateusborges

Quote from: antonis on June 10, 2021, 04:51:20 PM
Quote from: mateusborges on June 10, 2021, 03:57:15 PM
It's really hard trying to explain.

If so, it should be really harder to get an answer.. :icon_wink:

Maybe something like this?



idy

That last one won't work: the four diodes in question are now "always on" (before you short them out) and so the lowest forward voltage one will always be in the circuit. When you short them out it works though.

When your switch is open, the signal can "get around" the selected diode by taking the path of "least resistance" (lowest Vf) through another diode. The point "uphill" of all four diodes is always connected now, and the point "downhill" is too.

I think you need a four pole toggle or stomp switch, or just another four sets of diodes.

When you actually start experimenting and listening, you may find that adding a single asymmetric diode to all four sets gives you the sound you want. You may even find having nothing in one direction (opamp clipping?) sounds good.

mateusborges

Quote from: idy on June 10, 2021, 10:03:30 PM
That last one won't work: the four diodes in question are now "always on" (before you short them out) and so the lowest forward voltage one will always be in the circuit. When you short them out it works though.

When your switch is open, the signal can "get around" the selected diode by taking the path of "least resistance" (lowest Vf) through another diode. The point "uphill" of all four diodes is always connected now, and the point "downhill" is too.

I think you need a four pole toggle or stomp switch, or just another four sets of diodes.

S2

Thanks a lot man! I think I can see it now, if I add such a switch I will be getting the asym clipping, but the "least resistance" diode will be the only one always selected, the other 3 will never be in the circuit, something like this?

If the switch is closed tho it would work for making clipping sym, right?

QuoteWhen you actually start experimenting and listening, you may find that adding a single asymmetric diode to all four sets gives you the sound you want. You may even find having nothing in one direction (opamp clipping?) sounds good.

Cool, gonna see what else I get to distort hehe

idy

Quoteif I add such a switch I will be getting the asym clipping, but the "least resistance" diode will be the only one always selected, the other 3 will never be in the circuit,

That's it.

QuoteIf the switch is closed tho it would work for making clipping sym, right?

If by "closed" you mean "open", then yes! :icon_lol:

When a switch is allowing signal to go through it is "closed" (the contacts are closed, they are touching) and when they connection is broken so nothing can get through they are "open." Kind of the opposite of a door to a house or restaurant. When those are closed, you stay outside!

mateusborges

#11
Not sure if someone could benefit of it but if so, feel free to do so.



Link for switch I used: https://www.aliexpress.com/item/32820022728.html

Thanks all for all the help!

PRR

> closing the deal in wich ones

Not sure what you are looking for. In this thread you have a 4-position switch but in PM you said 8 position?


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idy

That last version I like... you found a way to do it: a 2p4t which spins through two sets of four options, and a SPDT that lets you choose which pole of the rotary you want to use. Clever. Because you want to be able to toggle between sim/assym for each type of diode.

mateusborges

Quote from: PRR on June 15, 2021, 07:41:02 PM
> closing the deal in wich ones
Not sure what you are looking for. In this thread you have a 4-position switch but in PM you said 8 position?

Heya Paul! Thanks for the reply.
Sorry about the confusion, what I'm trying to do it's exactly as you drawn, a SPDT for chosing between sym/asym and then the 2p4t board to select between four options, but since I still have no idea of all cool possible choices I was thinking about actually using a full board of sym options and a full board of asym options, having the SPDT to select between the sides of the board, and later in the actual pedal, reducing those 8 options to the 4 coolest sym and 4 coolest asym.

Any suggestions in wich combos I should check?

Thanks!

mateusborges

#15
Quote from: idy on June 15, 2021, 11:21:39 PM
That last version I like... you found a way to do it: a 2p4t which spins through two sets of four options, and a SPDT that lets you choose which pole of the rotary you want to use. Clever. Because you want to be able to toggle between sim/assym for each type of diode.

Thanks man! Thanks to you guys!

Any suggestion for wich combos I should check?

PRR

I'm not the clip-diode connoisseur.

8 choices is a LOT to compare. I would not get too committed. Get a hi-fi amp speaker terminal board, four push-lock terminals. Two pairs of diodes and an A/B switch.
https://www.sparkfun.com/products/retired/11145
https://www.reichelt.com/de/en/speaker-terminal-4-way-clamp-connection-bkl-0205026-p235709.html
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mateusborges

Heyas!!

I'm back with clipping and switches... Again... For 2 reasons:

1) to contribute something for all the help, info and knowledge I got from this community.
2) to make sure I got it right.

I've used the amazing VeroRoute (https://sourceforge.net/projects/veroroute/) for making myself an etchable 'clipping switch PCB' for my next Big Muff build.



Details:
a) it's a 2P6T switch.
b) the single diode positions (D1, D2, D3, D8, D9 and D10) will be used with each couple of diodes stacked, I need space.
c) diodes 6, 7, 13 and 14 will be ~0.3v Ge.
d) i'll be using 2N7000 MOSFETs.

Is everything correct with it?

Cheers!

idy

It took me a while to understand why it is 2 pole... because the bigmuff has two sets of clippers! It looks like a nice testing tool when trying out clippers in a circuit...

It looks correct.... but I think you will find:
1) 6 sets is too many for real life
2) many will sound similar
3) You haven't added any asymmetry (although obviously you could "populate" the board to achieve this, leaving out some, mismatching some pairs...)
4) or allowed that just maybe you'd like something different in the two stages.

I made a few muffs with assymetric MOSFETs, and flipped the second set so the asymmetry stays "the same way around" (since the stages are inverting.) I liked that.

The difference in volume as a practical consideration, the pedal "feels" very different to a player when they switch over to a louder set of clippers, making comparison hard. Volume is so overwhelming and easy to hear, and there is a "louder is better" bias to our hearing system (up to a point!) The differences make switching "on the fly" less practical. Some of us have experimented with multi-pole switches to also "pad" the output volume with a resistor so the louder setting is close to the quieter. This works sort of but not for all settings of the pedal's volume and gain.... But is worth checking out still.

mateusborges

Heya Idy!

Quote from: idy on September 27, 2021, 12:39:34 PM
It took me a while to understand why it is 2 pole... because the bigmuff has two sets of clippers!
Hehe sorry.

QuoteIt looks correct.... but I think you will find:
1) 6 sets is too many for real life
2) many will sound similar
3) You haven't added any asymmetry (although obviously you could "populate" the board to achieve this, leaving out some, mismatching some pairs...)
4) or allowed that just maybe you'd like something different in the two stages.
1) agree, but since I will be using it only at my studio I think that some more options would help me adjusting the effect to the different instruments/amps/musicians it will face. I tried quite a few combos in my 1st one and selected the 6 I liked the most for this one.
2) indeed they do.
3) that's the idea, populating the board with different stuff so I don't need a different board just for the assymetrical combos.
4) in fact my initial idea was using 2 of these boards, one for each stage and mix and match between those 'till I can get the ones I like the most and put those in a single board.

QuoteI made a few muffs with assymetric MOSFETs, and flipped the second set so the asymmetry stays "the same way around" (since the stages are inverting.) I liked that.
Cool! I liked that! Gonna try it!

QuoteThe difference in volume as a practical consideration, the pedal "feels" very different to a player when they switch over to a louder set of clippers, making comparison hard. Volume is so overwhelming and easy to hear, and there is a "louder is better" bias to our hearing system (up to a point!) The differences make switching "on the fly" less practical. Some of us have experimented with multi-pole switches to also "pad" the output volume with a resistor so the louder setting is close to the quieter. This works sort of but not for all settings of the pedal's volume and gain.... But is worth checking out still.
That's a very nice idea! How could I implement that? Just add some resistance before each set hits ground?

Cheers!