The Mechanic Fuzz (from Chuck's Boneyard)

PedalBuilder

Well-known member
Bottom line up front—this thing is seriously awesome. For those not in the know, it's a modified fuzz face that uses an op amp servo circuit to keep the bias stabilized at a wide range of temperatures.

So having said the most important part, on to the build. I went slightly premium on this one—Wima, Nichicon, and silver mica caps and mil-spec 1T320V transistors. I have a sizable stash of low leakage, mid-to-high gain Soviet transistors with BCE pinouts and thought that they would be good fits for this build, so I laid out the board with in-line BCE footprints rather than the usual TO-5 footprint. The I/O board uses P-channel MOSFETs, a few resistors, and a couple zener diodes to provide reverse polarity and over-voltage protection. The relay bypass board at the bottom has tap for latching, hold for momentary bypass/engage functionality.

There are a few hidden components. Tayda does not stock a 2.5mm thick 6.8nF Wima cap, so I went with a 2.2nF Wima capacitor with a 4.7nF gray box cap in parallel on the opposite side of the board. There is also a 100nF ceramic bypass capacitor on the back of the board under the op amp. It's best practice to place the bypass capacitor as close to the V+ pin as possible, and in this case the best location was directly under the chip.

I made a couple minor changes to the schematic. First, I used a nominally 390pF silver mica that measured as 440pF for C7. The CA3130 data sheet says that a 47pF capacitor is usually sufficient here, and it worked on the breadboard, so I felt fine making the change. Second, I replaced the 100pF Miller capacitor in C10 with a 53p silver mica. The 1T320V transistors have a warmer sound than the other transistors (GT308V, P416B, 2N2043) that I tried, so lowering the value of C10 helped prevent the tone from getting too dark and wooly. I could have used ceramic for both of the caps, but silver mica looked cooler and fit the vibe.

I tested a few other changes on the breadboard, but they did not make the cut. I tested increasing the Q1 collector resistor from 10kΩ to 33kΩ to match the Fuzz Face, but the bias stability suffered and the transient response/picking sensitivity was underwhelming.

Let's see, what else? The 1T320V's that I used for Q1 and Q2 have hFEs of 82 and 114, respectively, and less than 20µA leakage at 70ºF. I tried other gain buckets and all of them sounded good. That said, Q1 should not have an hFE above ~100, or the bias stability gets wonky.

Per Chuck's recommendation, I set the trim pot so that with the external Bias pot at 12:00, Q2's collector voltage is at 1/2 VCC, i.e. 4.5v with a 9v power supply. With the bias control turned fully counter clockwise, the tone gets spitty, synthy, and gated; when turned fully clockwise, the tone is smooth and compressed but not quite gated.

I tested the pedal at temperatures as high as 120ºF and as low as 50ºF. I didn't bother testing at temperatures above or below that because who wants to play in those conditions? Not me. Regardless of temperature, Q2's collector voltage quickly stabilized at the same voltage, ±0.005v. Pretty impressive!

One quirk of this pedal is that due to the auto-bias feature it needs to be powered on for ~15 seconds before the bias current starts to flow and the servo stabilizes it.

Obligatory gutshot:
IMG_3900.jpeg

I went with Tayda's metallic candy red enclosure, which I had UV printed by Tayda with a double pass on the white layer and matte gloss finish. I had Tayda do the drilling, too. The outie DC jack has flattened sides, so I used the drill shape option for its hole to hold it more securely. The resulting hole was a tiny bit too small for the jack, but I was able to expand it to fit the jack using a small curved file.

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That looks great. A nice all-round package! Are you doing offboard wiring for the bottom row of pots?
Good eye, that's exactly what I did. I'd originally designed the PCB for a planned enclosure with the holes for the bottom pots directly under the Level and Fuzz pots, but realized that it looked better if I moved the pots towards the center of the enclosure.
 
This is awesome @PedalBuilder !!

Is your relay bypass your own design/code?
The layout is my design. This is the third iteration of the hardware, and version 5 of the code. It started off as a derivative of the MAS Effects relay bypass system. Over time I've made some changes to reduce power consumption and to let boards "talk" to each other so that additional footswitch LEDs (e.g. channel indicators) will turn off when the effect is bypassed.
 
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