Aria James
New member
Hey everyone,
I’ve been experimenting with simple DIY audio circuits lately and started wondering how far you can go using the LM386 as the core of a small effects pedal. I recently found this project on The Engineering Projects that walks through building a simple LM386 audio amplifier in Proteus https://www.theengineeringprojects.com/2021/06/simplest-lm386-audio-amplifier-in-proteus.html, and it really sparked my curiosity. I’ve also seen similar builds discussed on the Arduino forums and a few DIYStompboxes and Instructables posts where people used LM386-based circuits for fuzz or overdrive pedals. Has anyone here tried making one themselves? How does it actually sound compared to preamp ICs or op-amp–based designs like TL072 or NE5532? Would love to hear your experience or any tips on improving tone clarity when using the LM386 in pedal circuits.
I’ve been experimenting with simple DIY audio circuits lately and started wondering how far you can go using the LM386 as the core of a small effects pedal. I recently found this project on The Engineering Projects that walks through building a simple LM386 audio amplifier in Proteus https://www.theengineeringprojects.com/2021/06/simplest-lm386-audio-amplifier-in-proteus.html, and it really sparked my curiosity. I’ve also seen similar builds discussed on the Arduino forums and a few DIYStompboxes and Instructables posts where people used LM386-based circuits for fuzz or overdrive pedals. Has anyone here tried making one themselves? How does it actually sound compared to preamp ICs or op-amp–based designs like TL072 or NE5532? Would love to hear your experience or any tips on improving tone clarity when using the LM386 in pedal circuits.