Hi everyone!
I completed my first pedal/electronics project in which I built the Sanguine distortion. Everything seems to work fine, but the treble leaves a lot to be desired. In the room, it has to pretty much be cranked all the way to start sounding aggressive, while all the way down makes this strange artifacting sound.
I've tested all the components and they seem to be operating as designed, so I'm wondering if there's a specific component I could replace in order to give the treble knob a lot more strength, as well as possibly shifting the frequency from around 2k to 4-6k?
A photo of the inside is attached and I've also made a demonstration video which you can watch here:
That video has audio from both the phone and the mic. The phone audio is more similar to the IRL sound, but in the room it still feels less aggressive than either. The pedal is also feeding straight into my peavey's power amp, just like how the real Revv G4 should be operated.
Worth noting that the midrange knob has a huge control spectrum and works great, and the bass works pretty well too. It's just the treble that makes the pedal feel super weak, or extremely mid-rangey when cranked all the way.
The spaghetti wiring is due to using a pre-existing enclosure and pots with the board (although all the pots have the exact same values as the sanguine schematic)
Thanks for your time!
I completed my first pedal/electronics project in which I built the Sanguine distortion. Everything seems to work fine, but the treble leaves a lot to be desired. In the room, it has to pretty much be cranked all the way to start sounding aggressive, while all the way down makes this strange artifacting sound.
I've tested all the components and they seem to be operating as designed, so I'm wondering if there's a specific component I could replace in order to give the treble knob a lot more strength, as well as possibly shifting the frequency from around 2k to 4-6k?
A photo of the inside is attached and I've also made a demonstration video which you can watch here:
That video has audio from both the phone and the mic. The phone audio is more similar to the IRL sound, but in the room it still feels less aggressive than either. The pedal is also feeding straight into my peavey's power amp, just like how the real Revv G4 should be operated.
Worth noting that the midrange knob has a huge control spectrum and works great, and the bass works pretty well too. It's just the treble that makes the pedal feel super weak, or extremely mid-rangey when cranked all the way.
The spaghetti wiring is due to using a pre-existing enclosure and pots with the board (although all the pots have the exact same values as the sanguine schematic)
Thanks for your time!