I am not sure this is easy to do in general. There may be some pedals for which it’s easy to merge the controls (although I can’t really imagine what tone stack topology would let you do that, and how the merged controls would work) and others hard.
However I would recommend a different approach: move the less “useful” or interesting controls to a trim pot inside the pedal or replace them with a pair of resistors that you can socket and change later (depending on the topology, one resistor may be enough).
My first reaction was to put a BMP tone stack in there. I reread the question and now I have a question. Fully CCW it’s only bass and CW only treble and at noon it’s a mid hump? Sounds like you want a variable band pass filter
I'm trying to put two preamp pedals, a power amp pedal, a reverb pedal, and some other stuff into a chassis and hopefully make a two-channel combo amp. The chassis can't really fit a bunch of knobs from the pedals, so my main goal is to have less of them.
Thanks for this idea. I see that the M800 already has 6 trim pots inside of it, and one is labeled "tone" so that seems like something to check out. I was also considering using concentric pots to combine 2 knobs into 1, but it's hard to find them with values matching the build guide. Do pot values affect the sound a good amount?
I'm not really sure honestly I read that a tone knob on a guitar was a low pass filter, but I don't know if it's the same on pedals/amps. I will look into the variable band pass
Take a look at the Tilt EQ format. That does about as much on one knob as anything I've seen. Not necessarily the greatest for midrange tweaking though.I'm not really sure honestly I read that a tone knob on a guitar was a low pass filter, but I don't know if it's the same on pedals/amps. I will look into the variable band pass