Chuck D. Bones
Circuit Wizard
LoL. I'm glad you guys are deriving some benefit from my ramblings.
To Sum it up, Do you think it is worth building or not???Final update:
I changed C7 (tant), C8 (film), R18, R21, VR2, VR3, added R23. 78L05s can be a little noisy and R23 kills the noise. C4 can be 22nF or 33nF. 33nF adds a little more midrange when BRIGHT is turned up. With compressors, it's a trade between speed and distortion. Fast ones can make distortion and low distortion ones have a slower attack. Setting RELEASE below noon will produce some distortion on the lower strings, but the initial pop when SUSTAIN is dimed has been minimized. Not a bad compressor, but not as good as the Delegate IMO. Next up: one more look at the Thumbsucker.
Well, at least I don't feel as bad about not finishing itI'm not going to take it beyond the breadboard stage. So, in summary, no. It's given me some ideas on tweaking the Thumbsucker and also caused me to reconsider optical compressors.
Yes, and because there is a feedback into the side chain, you run out of gain eventually, because ratio is derived from a signal that is already compressed. The more you wind up ratio, the more compression until this game stops eventually - you run out of gain. This means at some point the ratio does not increase any more. It has been proven.The RATIO knob is better named SUSTAIN since it controls the maximum available gain.
This may well be. Roey Itzhaki in his great studio book explains how the transit gets mangled in a way that it loses its shape towards a shape that contains less high frequencies. But indeed, this does not explain the loss on a strummed guitar for example. How much of tone is determined by the initial transit, how much by the sustain part?I think the main reason compressors can sound "dull" or lack treble is that the high-freq content on a guitar note decays faster than the low-freq content.
That's the crux with all compressors. The low frequencies are more powerful. Which is why for broad-band program material you must employ some high-passing, but this addresses bass and bass drum in a mix. I agree this is beyond the scope of this unit.The peak detector follows the peak signal (hence the name) which is dominated by low-freq content.
This is not always a merit. It depends entirely on the purpose. Opto compressors are the tool of choice for vocals, but some have used it successfully for other material for fresh and unusual results. Opto's are good for leveling, but some have achieved excellent results with very fast compressors.OTAs respond much more quickly and precisely than an LDR.