I'm okay with this being an experiment. A few months ago I made another version of this circuit but in a much more condensed form factor. I'm going to use this circuit as a control as I learn about PCB design, so I can have something constant to compare different layouts.Hopefully you have no crosstalk between the in and out traces.
Don’t think it’s high gain enough it will matter tho. Time will tell.
If anything you can run the input and output on different edges of the pcb.I spaced out their long traces to be equidistant from each other and the edge of the board. At the footswitch, their close proximity is unavoidable, so I'm not so much worried about that.
yeah it's hard bc I want the footswitch hanging off the end of the board because I like it as far down as possible, so space is limited. If i ran the in/out traces on either side, then the trace connecting the bottom left and bottom right lugs would interfere with the bottom center lug of the footswitch's ability to connect to the IN of the circuit. Because I put all the signal traces on one side for some reason idk. For this, I redid the pinout of the switch to allow the traces better access to the lug pads, but the result is both in/out on the same side.If anything you can run the input and output on different edges of the pcb.
I've noticed that even with my worst designs (aka first ones) I haven't had any problems with the traces causing oscillation or interference. I suppose I could go dig out my engineering books and look it up.. but where is the fun in that?![]()
would you not just stick the LED switch in the middle?If i ran the in/out traces on either side, then the trace connecting the bottom left and bottom right lugs would interfere with the bottom center lug of the footswitch's ability to connect to the IN of the circuit.
The LED switch could go in the middle, but check out the trace that grounds the input of the pedal when the circuit is bypassed.would you not just stick the LED switch in the middle?