ChrsGuit
Active member
Just finished building the Sproing Reverb pedal.
One glaring "problem" is that I don't seem to be getting much Reverb unless I'm cranking the knob all the way...
Now, I don't expect it to have the same sound as an old Fender amp Reverb, but I'm just curious if there are any incremental adjustments I can make to get a bit more Reverb out of it.
I installed the specified Long Decay BTDR-2H Belton Brick.
I was curious if perhaps swapping the pot from a A10k to a B10k would give a more desired sweep... or if I could simply increase the pot value a bit to get a bit more Fender Amp-like" Reverb performance...
I'm not exactly going for spacey shoegaze territory, but this is being built to add a decent Reverb to a non-Reverb 1965 Fender Showman amp.
Any suggestions as to how I can get just about 20% more or so out of it and without any adverse effects. I'm still leaning towards a B taper pot vs Audio, so I can noticeably bring the Reverb in sooner...
One glaring "problem" is that I don't seem to be getting much Reverb unless I'm cranking the knob all the way...
Now, I don't expect it to have the same sound as an old Fender amp Reverb, but I'm just curious if there are any incremental adjustments I can make to get a bit more Reverb out of it.
I installed the specified Long Decay BTDR-2H Belton Brick.
I was curious if perhaps swapping the pot from a A10k to a B10k would give a more desired sweep... or if I could simply increase the pot value a bit to get a bit more Fender Amp-like" Reverb performance...
I'm not exactly going for spacey shoegaze territory, but this is being built to add a decent Reverb to a non-Reverb 1965 Fender Showman amp.
Any suggestions as to how I can get just about 20% more or so out of it and without any adverse effects. I'm still leaning towards a B taper pot vs Audio, so I can noticeably bring the Reverb in sooner...