Here's the mods I used last night. TI TL072BCP, Mylar Films on the .1uF's in audio path, ceramic for the others. Poly caps for the .01 & .001's. I may have used a ceramic across the inverting feedback on the LFO... it was acting strange. I'm gonna use a poly for that and see if it acts more normally next time I crack it open.

1 - I changed the 470k pot to 100K. It gave me more useable range on the pot. This is probably due, as noted by culturejam, to the difference in OP Amps on the LFO... just a guess.
2 - The variable delay helped thicken up the low end with the extra shift in time... also adds a bit to the tricks you can get it to do!
3 - The "Wet Out" pot helps keep this out of flanging territory. I was getting too much wet signal and loosing the effect when the delay increased. This lets you drop the delayed signal a bit more into the background so you can still keep the nice chorusing effect. Also, within the usable (to you) range, you'll find a whole set of different tones available.
4 - The 10K on the output is just for trimming back the volume if you find, like with my setup, that the overtones really drive hard and throws your sound too far above everyone else when the pedal is engaged.
These pot mods use the existing (if you etch a PCB) resistor pads. You just solder the resistor between the center and outer lugs right on the pot. The output mod (referring to the layout
http://i210.photobucket.com/albums/bb292/frequencycentral/LittleAngelPCB.gif ) you just cut the trace between the R14 pad and the C12/C15/OUT trace. If you drill a hole right next to the pad (to the right, under the right pads of C12 and C13), you can run a wire through from the top, fold it over and solder right to the R14 pad. Wire the other end to the output pad, run the output from your center lug and you're set!