jjjimi84
Well-known member
- Build Rating
- 5.00 star(s)
A while back I got this solid state amp (Vox MV-50) in a trade and bought the matching cabinet to go with it. My son was playing a bit of guitar at the time and was having fun using it. Like most 11 year olds, he lost interest in guitar for now and is playing clarinet and loving it! I grabbed the little amp and started messing around with it and found it takes amp in a box style pedals really really well. This made me dig out as many as I could find painted and started filming with this thing right away. This is the first of a bunch of them coming out this month, I love this breed of pedals and am loving the sounds out of them.
3 DIY Amp In A Box Style Pedals
	
		
	
First trio out of the gate is the Tweed Sound;
 
 
Built in a tayda yellow enclosure, completely stock with a little dog painted on there with an epoxy pour coat.
Next up is the Marble drive in a bare enclosure with posca paint pens and a epoxy pour.
 
 
Last is the sabbath drive, in a red enclosure, flowers of the dead painted on there in an epoxy coat. All stock builds and just rippers!
 
 
				
			3 DIY Amp In A Box Style Pedals
First trio out of the gate is the Tweed Sound;
 
 
Built in a tayda yellow enclosure, completely stock with a little dog painted on there with an epoxy pour coat.
Next up is the Marble drive in a bare enclosure with posca paint pens and a epoxy pour.
 
 
Last is the sabbath drive, in a red enclosure, flowers of the dead painted on there in an epoxy coat. All stock builds and just rippers!
 
 
 
	 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
 
			 
			 
			 I was playing along to some tunes and occasionally I heard sag/gating. Mostly single notes. I tried to find a way to recreate this easily and found that all I had to do was hit a single note hard directly over the bridge pickup. I tried this with two different guitars and it was like this with both. It only happened at 18V, though, at 9V it didn't. So I had an inkling that I needed to replace Q2 and Q3 (one of them might be enough I reckon from previous experience, see above) as well with lower VP. So I put -2.1V VP in and this problem was gone, too. It looks like this circuit is a little fickle as far as VP is concerned
 I was playing along to some tunes and occasionally I heard sag/gating. Mostly single notes. I tried to find a way to recreate this easily and found that all I had to do was hit a single note hard directly over the bridge pickup. I tried this with two different guitars and it was like this with both. It only happened at 18V, though, at 9V it didn't. So I had an inkling that I needed to replace Q2 and Q3 (one of them might be enough I reckon from previous experience, see above) as well with lower VP. So I put -2.1V VP in and this problem was gone, too. It looks like this circuit is a little fickle as far as VP is concerned 

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