Sabbath distortion

Adam Dale

New member
Guys. It goes without saying that im a noob. Ive built a few kits and wanted to try my hand at sourcing my own parts. On this sabbath build i used a different pot for the presence. It called for b10k and i used a10k. Also on one of the caps i used a 250v. Its overkill but it shouldnt be preventing me from getting a signal. Signal is very dim. Sounds very far away and tinny. I double checked the orientation of the electrolytic sections and theyre all correct. Any help would be appreciated
 
Using a multimeter with the components in the circuit is problematic, just do a thorough visual inspection. Your electro caps will have the value written on them, film caps are coded differently ie 474 is 470nf, 473 is 47nf, 472 is 4.7nf. There’s charts on the internet if you feel inclined to find em and learn. There’s a DigiKey app that has resistor value tools and such in it, it’s pretty handy.
 
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Using a multimeter with the components in the circuit is problematic, just do a thorough visual inspection. Your electro caps will have the value written on them, film caps are coded differently ie 474 is 470nf, 473 is 47nf, 472 is 4.7nf. There’s charts on the internet if you feel inclined to find em and learn. There’s a DigiKey app that has resistor value tools and such in it, it’s pretty handy.
Thank you man. Appreciate the help
 
You can also download a program called "Electronics Assistant" from electronics2000.co.uk if you're on a windows machine. It's got your basics on how to read resistor bands (literally just point and click the colors and it spits out the answer so it's easy to associate and learn) cap codes and conversions, LED current limiting resistor calculations, resistors in series/parallel, caps in series/parallel, 555 timer stuff and some other stuff for power and inductance etc. It's a great educational tool or to keep handy if you just casually use some functions sparsely and don't really remember the details. I use it a lot for calculating resistors in parallel because I'm too lazy to do the math, lol.
 
It appears that i used a bc184lc in Q1 as opposed to bc184. I believe the pinout is different. Or should this have worked
As a fellow newb, one tip I could add is to always socket your transistors (and ICs) so you can try different stuff or more easily troubleshoot. It’s saved my butt a few times.
 
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