Delegate Compressor Boneyard Edition (EQD The Warden)

MattG

Well-known member
I finished up my Delegate Compressor (Boneyard Edition), based on the Earthquaker Devices The Warden. Here's Chuck's Delegate (Warden) Upgrades thread where he describes the changes made to the circuit.

The build itself was unremarkable, everything went together and appears to work correctly since the first power-up. I did use my buffered electrical bypass module for bypass switching. Perhaps the most exciting part of the build was using these Mushroom Head Momentary Switches that I learned about from @jubal81. If the specs are to be believed, they are substantially more robust than the momentary switches we commonly see used. The common ones, such as these are rated for 50k mechanical cycles and 6k electrical cycles. Whereas these "mushroom head" switches appear to be clones of these Apiele momentary switches which are rated for 1 million mechanical cycles and 200k electrical cycles. Even if the specs are exaggerated, they are nice because the "mushroom" makes a nice foot-friendly stomping surface; and they have screw terminals for quick and easy field replacement if they turn out to not be so robust. The closest comparison are these Lehle Momentary Switches, but I'm not ready to spend $20 for my switches!

For the enclosure, I recycled the grim reaper graphic I used for my Hybrid Fuzz Driver Deluxe. I used Dishwasher Safe Mod Podge to apply a Sunnyscopa film-free laser decal, as described here. This was on a Tayda Chrome Green enclosure. I'm not sure if it's the infamously fragile Tayda Chrome finish or the Dishwasher Safe Mod Podge, but some time after I drilled the holes, tiny cracks appeared on the enclosure face, coming out from the pot holes. I'm fairly certainly those did not happen during the drilling, I think they appeared while the enclosure sat idle waiting on the circuit to be built.

As for the effect itself... I think I'm only just now starting to "get" compressors. I've been using my Median (Wampler Ego 76) fairly regularly since I built it. I like to think of it as "an overdrive for my clean channel". What I find I'm liking is a slow attack (so the initial picking dynamics aren't lost), and a slow release for increased sustain. I like using the blend so the compressed sound doesn't completely take over, and that allows me to bump up the compression fairly high without the sound getting too "squished". At least that's how I've been running the Median. I've been trying to dial in the Delegate similarly, and I'm not sure if I've achieved that exactly yet. To me, the Delegate does generally feel "cleaner" than the Median - by that I mean it seems to color the sound less. With the sustain cranked, I was getting a tiny bit of dirt (which could have been the larger charge-pump based signal overdriving the next device in my chain? I need to test it in isolation).

Anyway, I'm glad I built it and look forward to spending more time with it!
 

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Man that chrome green looks great. Reminds me of some bikes I helped spec back in the early '90s.
Really cool you've got an open-mind to the possibilities of compression — but then I suppose there aren't too many BCA types on this forum. 😸

You should tell @JTEX how you're using the dry/wet blend — that is probably the best description I've read of one of the uses for, and how to use, a clean-blend with compression.


Really good build & report.
 
What's a "BCA type"?




Thank you!

Sorry — I must've been tired when I posted that;
For most on here it would be GCA (GUITAR > CABLE > AMP)...

BCA = BASS > CABLE > AMP

While it's much more acceptable for guitarists to have a few pedals, there are still some that eschew pedals.
In bass-playing circles, the number of instrument>cable>amp types is much-much greater, dare I say the vast majority and even other band-members will say: "What do you need effects for, you play bass...".

A couple of my favourites:

"If you learned how to play your instrument properly, you wouldn't need a compressor."​
or
"Compressors just kill my dynamics, why would I want to do that?"​

On the TalkBass forum it's very common for BCA types to enter an effects thread titled something like "What effect should I get for this sound?" and then make snide remarks about how you don't need effects and should rip the "Crutch" out of your signal-chain and ... in general poo-poo pew-pew shoot/shit down any/all effects.

It got so bad, that a STICKY-MUST-READ-RULE was made that BCA types aren't s'posed to post in the EFFECTS Sub-Forum — but of course they still do and still trash both effects and anyone that uses them, albeit in a more subtle way that won't get them kicked off the forum for good.


Compressors fascinate me — they're like building a bicycle wheel (or spoked motorcycle wheel), there's a black art to them that still keeps me interested and hungry to learn more about bringing balance to all dimensions of them.

So I was delighted when I read you were coming to understand and enjoy them — and in so doing you have given me new understanding, as well.


Do you happen to know if the Sunnyscopa glue has a shelf-life?
 
"If you learned how to play your instrument properly, you wouldn't need a compressor."​
or
"Compressors just kill my dynamics, why would I want to do that?"​

Ahhh, so classic discussion forum noise that boils down to "my opinion is objective truth, and everyone who disagrees is stupid and sucks!".

Common on web forums, and before that I saw it on USENET, and before that I saw it on dial-up bulletin board systems.

I try to adhere to the actual real objective truth: different people like different things and that's cool. :)


Do you happen to know if the Sunnyscopa glue has a shelf-life?

I don't. But: I still have my original bottle of "W1+" glue I bought in early 2022. I just used it, so that single data point implies the shelf-life is at least four years.
 
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