KR Sound Well-known member Today at 6:34 PM #1 Seems like I should know this. Is there anything making this circuit unable to swap the power jack? Or would I have to swap some cap orientations as well? Last edited: Today at 6:46 PM
Seems like I should know this. Is there anything making this circuit unable to swap the power jack? Or would I have to swap some cap orientations as well?
Harry Klippton Well-known member Today at 6:51 PM #2 You have the pedal in front of you. Can't you trace it?
BuddytheReow Moderator Today at 8:16 PM #3 Do you still want to be able load a battery in there after swapping the power jack?
KR Sound Well-known member Today at 8:42 PM #4 BuddytheReow said: Do you still want to be able load a battery in there after swapping the power jack? Click to expand... Maybe, I’ll have to ask my friend. It should just be a matter of swapping out the jack and wiring it like normal. It’s been a long day and I’m overthinking this.
BuddytheReow said: Do you still want to be able load a battery in there after swapping the power jack? Click to expand... Maybe, I’ll have to ask my friend. It should just be a matter of swapping out the jack and wiring it like normal. It’s been a long day and I’m overthinking this.
Robert Reverse Engineer Today at 9:02 PM #5 If the goal is just to simply replace the DC jack, then yes, you can just replace it directly with any typical three terminal DC jack. The pedal is positive tip / positive ground though. I assume your friend uses a special power supply with this one? Reckon you could get some good clear pics of both sides of the PCB in there? For you know... science...
If the goal is just to simply replace the DC jack, then yes, you can just replace it directly with any typical three terminal DC jack. The pedal is positive tip / positive ground though. I assume your friend uses a special power supply with this one? Reckon you could get some good clear pics of both sides of the PCB in there? For you know... science...