GeneralBuildGuide DIY Pedal
GeneralBuildGuide DIY Pedal
Build
Guide
Your first stop
for build info
32 Why test?
09 Resistors 39 LED
21 Jack Sockets
22 DC Sockets
23 Footswitches
• The Basics
This was originally a separate document altogether, but no harm having
it here. You can easily jump past this if you know what’s what. This will
give an outline of the different components, including connectors and
switches.
• Testing
In almost every case it’s best to test the main circuit board before
connecting up the offboard elements.
Some of the above - particularly the last two sections - may not be relevant to your kit. In these
cases the individual documents for those kits will be more comprehensive than those that follow
these guidelines. You won’t be left hanging.
Some of the images used in this document are from the excellent
Pedal Builders Vector Pack from On the Road Effects.
INTRO 3
<
THE BASICS
What’s that stripe? Why does that hurt?
4
<
What’s in this section?
The basic information you’ll need to recognise a component, read its value
and find where to put it on a PCB.
What is it not?
A technical document or an indepth explanation of the ins, outs, whys and wherefores of
all things electronic. There are many online resources which will give you as much
information as you need about components, schematics, electricity, soldering
techniques etc. They’ll explain it far better than we could, so go out and learn if you want
to do more than put your nice new kit together.
A NOTE ON STATIC
Some components are very sensitive to
static, so you should take precautions to
ensure you aren’t going to damage them.
We wouldn’t expect someone starting out UN
LIK
to invest in specialist items to do this, so EL
Y
please do a search on ‘ESD protection’.
It can be as simple as touching something
metal before handling items.
Lesson 1
Soldering irons are hot. Solder gets hot. Everything a soldering iron touches gets hot.
Your hands don’t like it, and neither do the components you’ll be soldering.
Sure, some will complain less than others, but the basic rule is - only apply heat for as
long as necessary.
Learn which components are more resilient than others, and take the right precautions
where needed.
Lesson 2
Electricity kills. If you’re reading this you probably
don’t know nearly enough to go anywhere near mains
power. Stick to batteries and 9V power supplies, and
then only use the latter when you’ve tested your
circuit with the former.
Hopefully the following pages will have you recognising components with ease.
Seriously - invest in Electronics for Dummies and read it cover to cover. Twice.
Then go back and read the bits you weren’t sure of for a third time.
You don’t need to know how electrons move to build a fuzz box, but it sure is fascinating.
DIODE
TRANSISTOR
DIODE
POT
There are lots of different looking ones around, but for the most part you’ll deal with two kinds that
look very similar.
Most resistors supplied with our kits are rated at 0.25W (quarter watt) which is more than
adequate for the power they need to handle.
They’ll be made of either Carbon Film (usually beige/yellowish case) or Metal Film (blue case).
They do the same job, they’re just made of different stuff and have different tolerances. In most kits
these parts will be around 6mm in length. Some kits have smaller 3mm resistors which are fiddly
to handle but do the same job in a tighter space..
Carbon film resistors normally have quite a high tolerance - around 5%, meaning a 100K resistor
may measure anywhere between 95-105K. This is fine in a lot of cases, but sometimes something
more precise is required.
Metal Film resistors are normally 1% tolerance, even 0.1% if you want to spend a lot of money, but
that kind of precision simply isn’t required here.
Resistors are measured in ohms, and the codes are shown as multiples of 1 ohm.
0 BLACK 5 GREEN
The tolerance band shows you the %
1 BROWN 6 BLUE
margin of possible variation in the shown
2 RED 7 VIOLET
value. There are a few of these, but you’ll
3 ORANGE 8 GREY
mostly come across Silver (10%), Gold (5%),
4 YELLOW 9 WHITE
Brown (1%)
4-BAND 5-BAND
1st Digit 2nd Digit Multiplier Tolerance 1st Digit 2nd Digit 3rd Digit Multiplier Tolerance
The first two bands of this resistor give you The first three bands of this resistor give you
two digits. In this case 2 and O. three digits. In this case 3, 9 and 0.
The third band gives you the multiplier, which The fourth band gives you the multiplier, in this
is the number of zeros to add after the first case 4.
two digits, in this case 1.
The resistor above measures 390 followed by 4
The resistor above measures 200 ohms. zeros. That makes it 3,900,000, or 3900K, so
3.9M (also written as 3M9).
Resistor values under 1K will often be written as the value followed by R. Resistance, get it?
There are many different shapes and sizes of capacitors, or ‘caps’ out there, made from lots of
different materials, but they’ll generally fit into two distinct categories.
POLARISED means that the capacitor has a NON-POLARISED means there isn’t a positive
positive (+) side and a negative (-) side. or negative leg. Non-polarised caps can go
In essense that means that in a circuit a into the circuit either way round.
polarised cap has to go in a certain way.
The caps below are all different shapes, sizes
The positive leg will normally be longer than and materials, but they’re all non-polar and,
the negative. There’ll usually also be some believe it or not, all have exactly the same
kind of marking on the case to indicate which value. If placed in a circuit they’ll all do exactly
is which. In the image below the white stripe the same job, though different materials can
on the middle cap indicates the negative lead. have an effect on the sound of a circuit. Most
The small yellow cap is made of Tantalum, and of the non-polar caps that come with our kits
the positive leg is indicated by a +. are either polybox type (like the small cream
one, though they can be many other colours),
or ceramic like the small brown disc.
That being said, sometimes they don’t make as much sense as you’d like.
As with all components you should treat diodes with care, especially when bending the legs.
The points where they meet the glass casing are easily cracked, especially on the large DO-7 style
cases of the 1N34A or Russian germaniums. The best way to approach them is to grab the leg right
up against the body with your smallest needle-nosed pliers and bend the leg with your finger,
letting the pliers take the strain away from the casing.
Diodes have many purposes in the circuits we’re dealing with. This document is about identifying
them, not psychoanalysing them.
...or ICs, or chips. Little (usually) black packages of goodness, containing many tiny components.
One part to do the job of many. We recommend you always use a socket for these parts.
You’ll normally come across a black case with two rows of legs, like a lovely robotic insect from the
future. These are known as Dual InLine (DIL) packages. Occasionally you may have to deal with a
single row of legs, which are Single InLine packages (SIL), but these are less common.
You need to know which way round they go, and which leg is which. If you put them in the wrong
way and power up, chances are it’s goodnight IC. Hope you have a spare.
The silkscreen legend on our PCBs will have a notch at one end of the IC. This indicates the top.
The pin to the left of that notch is always pin 1. Sometimes an IC won’t have a notch, but will have a
small dot printed on the top of the case instead. This indicates pin 1.
From pin 1 you count down the package, then back up the other side to find your leg numbers.
Dimple
Dot
Pin 4 Pin 4
Pin 5
....and CONFUSION ALERT - the 78L05 voltage regular mentioned on the last page is actually
an IC in a transistor package. Don’t worry about it.
The fun part. These, along with switches, are likely your only point of interaction with a finished
circuit, so get them right.
They’ll either mount straight into the PCB or will be wired. The important thing to get right is the
leg numbering.
B = Linear
Change in resistance is the same throughout the turn.
Just to complicate things a little you may also come across DUAL-GANG pots. These have two rows
of pins - so six in total, and are essentially two pots in one. They enable control of two different
elements of a circuit with one knob. The two sets of resistances are almost always of the same
value, i.e. a 100KB dual-gang. If you ever come across a circuit that requires a dual-gang with two
different values, move on. That’s a world of pain, and thankfully very rare.
The potentiometer’s shy cousin. These are normally used for set-and-forget adjustments such as
transistor biasing. If you want to get really tweaky you can normally replace a trimmer with an
external pot, but more often than not there’s a good reason that control has been left inside.
These come in lots of shapes and sizes, as well as having different operational characteristics.
Some, such as lefty and centre up there, cover their entire resistance range in one single turn.
Others, such as righty, will require many turns - usually 13 or 25 - to get from one end to the other.
Easy does it. In both cases it can be quite easy to force the turn too far and snap the mechanism,
especially with the multiturns. Adjust these very slowly and delicately - you’ll feel a slight
resistance to the turn when they reach the end of the range. Don’t push it.
Two columns will be double-pole. Three columns... you get the idea.
This is followed by the throw - single or double. That’s usually all we’ll be dealing with, so no need
to get overly complicated here.
One more thing - the way they switch between those sets of poles. Maybe the switch has two
positions, switching from one sets of poles (ON) to the other (ON), which would be described as
ON-ON. If stops in the middle, where the centre pole connects to neither of the outer poles, so
totally off. This would be ON-OFF-ON. Simple, right?
You’d think so. We also deal with another type - ON-ON-ON - whereby in the centre position two
opposite sets of poles are connected. OK, brain freeze. It’ll be easier with illustrations - these show
the lugs on the bottom of the switch.
Below we have a DPDT ON-ON switch (double pole, double throw, two position).
The first simply shows the 6 poles - two sets of three. Centre pic shows which lugs are connected
when the switch is in the down position - the connection will always be the opposite side to that
which the switch is pointing in. The third pic shows the connections with the switch up. With an
ON-ON switch the centre two lugs will always be connected to one or the other sets of outer poles.
For an ON-OFF-ON, with the switch in the middle position the centre lugs aren’t connected to
either of the outer sets.
We’ll touch on ON-ON-ON (far right pic). In the centre position the lugs are connected as shown.
There are two types though, one connects as here, the other the opposite way. Phew!
Sometimes you need more than the two or three options offered by a simple toggle, no matter how
many poles you cram on there. In this case we can turn to the rotary.
Once again, these come in lots of different We may wish to switch three different
configurations depending on the number of elements of the circuit, but only want three
poles and throws required. different variations. We’d still need three poles,
but you’d only use three of the four throws.
For instance, if you needed one part of your
circuit to have twelve different switchable These often have long
options, you could use a 1P12T (one pole, shafts, so will require
twelve throw) switch. Perhaps you want to some hacksaw action to
change two things in the circuit, and have six shorten them.
different options of each - 2P6T. And so on, for
3P4T (three poles, four throws) and 4P3T (four
poles, three throws).
Here’s a view from below of a 3PDT rotary. It shows the central three poles connecting to each of
the corresponding outer poles as the switch is rotated through its four positions:
1 2 3 4
The gateway in and out of your pedal. We deal almost entirely with 6.35mm (1/4”),
and use three particular types across our range.
The type used in most of our kits. We tend to stick with Neutrik as a
manufacturer as the quality is second to none. Beware cheap
immitations. SLEEVE
You’ll normally deal with mono unless you want battery provision in SLEEVE
your pedal, in which case the TRS jack is used as a nifty way to
disconnect the battery when the input jack is removed. TIP
TIP
RING
LUMBERG SLEEVE
Handy in a tight spot, and also great quality. TIP
Same deal as above regarding configs.
SLEEVE
There are lots of types of these, but we tend to stick to those shown.
Again, available mono and TRS. Where these are used on our PCBs
we normally include extra pads so TRS can be used even when
mono will suffice. These jacks have two sets of pins for each
TIP RING SLEEVE
connection, one set being switched. This switch is opened when the
jack is inserted. Don’t worry about it. Our PCBs have you covered.
All are 2.1mm barrel, normally wired with the tip negative.
BOSS-STYLE SWITCHED
SWITCHED/
Used on almost everything we supply. BATTERY +
POSITIVE
These can be wired as a simple +/- or in conjunction with
GROUND
a TRS jack you can use them to include a battery in your
pedal. There’s a switch mechanism which disconnects
the battery supply when a DC plug is inserted.
MINI
Used for tighter builds such as FuzzPups POSITIVE
(hey - that’s a whole different document),
GROUND
or for pedals with top-mounted DC and jacks.
These have only two pins. The longer pin is
normally for your positive connection unless
otherwise stated in an individual build doc.
GROUND
THROUGH-HOLE POSITIVE
A PCB-mounted jack used on a few of our kits, such as
tester units or buffers. It’s difficult to get a square hole
drilled into an enclosure, so these will normally sit inside
the box with a round hole offering access. SWITCHED/
BATTERY +
Very important, as in most cases this is your main point of contact with your pedal.
We currently deal with two different types of these, one of which has two variants.
By far the most common type used is 3PDT (or three-pole, double throw). The actual mechanics of
these should be fairly clear from the description of the toggle switches.
We’ve been at this a long time, and have tried these switches from many different manufacturers.
We now have a standard 3PDT switch which we’re entirely confident in. This is the blue one.
We also offer a premium 3PDT from Gørva. This has a softer click than the standard switch and is,
in our opinion, worth the extra investment for a pedal you’re going to be stomping on a lot.
Our OptoPuss bypass system uses a DPDT switch, along with some clever circuitry to provide the
functionality of the 3PDT with one less pole. This has a much shorter throw - the distance the
switch travels before engaging - than the two 3PDT. It still has a definite ‘click’, somewhere in
between the other two.
GENERAL
BUILD
GUIDELINES
What to do... what not to do.
25
<
This isn’t paint by numbers
Sorry, no hand-holding here, just general tips on
putting the bits in the right place and getting your
pedal together.
2 Separate out the parts, read the values and check against the bill of materials (BOM).
3 Contact us immediately if something is missing, incorrect, or you simply can’t identify it.
4 Decide which order to assemble the parts - usually height is a good indicator. It’s good
practice to start with the smallest and least susceptible to heat, i.e. resistors. Here’s our
recommended order:
Resistors
Diodes (flat)
IC sockets
Film box caps
Electrolytic caps
Diodes (vertical)
Transistors
LEDs
Of course this list will totally depend on the individual kit, and you’ll find your own way after
a few builds.
6 Fix.
Repeat steps 5-6 until everything sounds good. It’s entirely pointless boxing up a partially
working circuit then trying to troubleshoot.
7 Embelish your enclosure. Of course you can do this first, but we sometimes hear from people
who’ve spent forever making the box look sweet but just can’t get the circuit working. What a
waste of time and effort.
9 Enjoy.
As mentioned on the previous page, READ THE KIT SPECIFIC BUILD DOCUMENT before you start.
Maybe we’ve messed up and mislabelled something.
Electrolytic capacitors:
Long leg (anode) to square pad. Stripe indicates cathode.
Diodes/LEDs:
Striped leg (cathode) to square pad. Short leg to square pad for LEDs.
The exception to this is with Russian germanium diodes - stripe = anode.
ICs:
Square pad indicates pin 1.
Capacitors - most will drop straight into the holes in the space provided, though with ceramic caps
the legs may need to splay slightly.
Transistors - most will need the two outer pins to splay slightly, some will be pre-formed to fit.
Diodes - bend those legs. Do this VERY carefully with large-bodied (DO-7) germanium diodes.
The body will very easily break if you don’t offer some strain relief. Grip the leg with needle-nosed
pliers tight against the body and bend the leg with your finger, letting the pliers take the strain.
Sometimes diodes need to be placed vertically - just bend one leg 180° to be parallel with the other.
ICs - the legs need to be eased inwards slightly to fit into their sockets.
We use a combination of both. Where there are a bunch of parts of the same height - i.e. resistors,
box caps etc - we use the first. Once you get onto electrolytic caps and transistors the latter is
definitely more practical.
Leg bend
Place your components one at a time and bend the legs out slightly against the pad so they can’t
fall back through. Done. Why don’t we just use this method for everything? We find the bent legs
can get in the way more when making your way through with the soldering iron. You could of course
just do a few parts at a time. Wish we’d thought of that...
Now, sometimes the pot pins will be hard to In this case it’d be best to place the two rear
access once all the other parts are soldered in pots first, soldering on the same side as the
- see below. pots with unhindered access. Then you can
approach the front pair from either side.
Toggles T
You shouldn’t ever have to worry about Single pin first, melt, adjust with some
accessing the pins for these - there’ll always wiggling until you get it nice and straight, then
be plenty of space. Use the same method to commit the other pins.
get them straight as per the pots.
Some people don’t like them as the joints where they meet the board can become brittle and snap
with repeated bending, but the same could be said of any wire.
On the majority of our kits these are 4-way, i.e. there are four individual wires in the ribbon.
Sometimes there are six or more, but individual kit documents will deal with that.
There’s really only two things to watch out for with these.
• Don’t try to make sharp bends. They will break internally. Keep your bends nicely curved.
• Determine which side of the PCB they’re going to go on before you break out the iron.
In some cases the ribbon will have to attach to the main component side of the board, in
others the pot side. You really don’t want to try to remove one of these once they’re attached.
They are difficult to strip if you need to shorten them, so it’s best to plan how they’re going to
sit in the enclosure to work out if you need to cut them or not.
Here the ribbon is on the same side as the In the case below there’s a pesky pot right
pots. It runs vertically straight down to the face where the ribbon would normally attach. Here
of the enclosure, has a gentle bend, runs we keep it on the component side of the PCB
below the jacks, another gentle bend and up to and solder it in before that pot. From here it
the underside of the daughtboard PCB. Nice. can arch over the top of the jacks and into the
If it was still a little long it could have bent top side of the daughterboard. No rules, just
back and gone under the main PCB a little. common sense and care.
TESTING
You really should y’know
31
<
Why test?
Yes, you’re keen to get this thing boxed and cranked, but testing is important. Why’s that?
You can then test board with ribbon connectors as much as you like.
INPUT
IN
V
G
OUT
OUTPUT
It looks a little messy due to all the ground connections having to go together, but it works.
Build your circuit and add your four lengths of wire to the I V G O pads. Make them nice and lengthy
as you’re probably going to cut them after testing.
You then wire up a temporary test configuration a lot like the previous page, but without the socket.
Instead of wiring the battery + to the main PCB, join the battery wire to the length of wire you’ve
connected to the main board.
INPUT
OUTPUT
Once tested, desolder the wires from the jacks, trim them to a better length for final assembly and
move onto the next stage. Job done.
FINAL
ASSEMBLY
Nearly there...
35
<
Still a little way to go
You’re going to have to scroll on further to find specific
instructions for your chosen bypass type, but the basic
method is the same regardless.
In most cases you’re going to have two jacks, a DC socket and a footswitch of some sort.
These all connect to a daughterboard which in turn drops onto your footswitch and connects
to your main circuit, completing the picture.
1 DC socket
It’s a bit fiddly trying to get the nut on once the footswitch is in place, so do this first.
2 Footswitch
It’s important to assemble this correctly. There are two nuts. One goes right down the threaded
part until it almost touches the body of the switch. Don’t set it right against the body. This nut
is there to put all the strain on the threads rather than where the body meets them. If you don’t
include this nut the switch will just pull apart when fastened up.
Next there’s either a serrated anti-vibration washer (3PDT switches) or a split washer (Alpha
DPDT switches) that goes on the inside of the enclosure against this first nut. Slip the
footswtich through the hole in the enclosure. Add the smooth washer if you have one, or
indeed want to include one, then the final nut to fasten it. Ensure it’s straight and tighten.
3 Jacks
Washer and nut on the outside of the enclosure. Fasten very loosely at first. Take note of the
position of the lugs in case they’ll interfere with the circuit board. Don’t fully tighten until the
circuit board is in place and you’ve manoeuvred the ribbon cable below them if necessary.
5 Footswitch daughterboard
...which you’ve already prepped after looking at that specific section.
Then it’s just a case of soldering everything to the daughterboard. We recommend doing the DC
socket wires first, as they’ll be hard to get to once the daughterboard is placed onto the footswtich.
We then locate the ribbon connector into the daughterboard pads and place the board onto the
footswitch before soldering them in, just to ensure everything sits nicely. Then just make all your
other connections. Everything should be readily accessible.
FINAL ASSEMBLY 36
<
Daughterboard prep
It’s easiest to add your wires before soldering the PCB to the footswitch.
Here’s a typical example for a standard box layout as above.
DC + and G - 20mm
FINAL ASSEMBLY 37
<
Note the position of the ribbon cable. It’s been curved below the jacks and is pointing straight up
around the same level as the footswitch poles, ready to drop the daughtboard onto.
FINAL ASSEMBLY 38
<
Dealing with the LED
We don’t use bezels, so this is what we do.
Before you solder the daughterboard to the footswitch you need to get the LED in there.
Before that, solder your Current Limiting Resistor, which stops the power destroying your LED, into
the two pads marked CLR. It should go on the underside of the daughterboard, positioned verically
as shown below.
You’re not soldering the LED yet. Just push the legs into the pads, slide it up a ways and then bend
the legs to stop it falling out.
Do the rest of your assembly, then this final step. Push the LED down through the daughterboard
and locate it into the hole in the enclosure. It’ll be nice and snug, and may need a little push with
your pliers. Ensure the legs aren’t twisted at all or touching each other. Once you’re happy, solder it
in. It’s now just as secure as if it had one of those ugly bezels. It’s good enough for EHX, Boss and
many others, so it should be good enough for you. If not, source a bezel. Myeh.
Awesome FUZZ
Clean
TONE
BYPASS
Several variations, same results
40
<
More than one way...
We offer several bypass switching options. The basic idea is the same in each case, but different
circuit boards are utilisied in each. You don’t have to use a daughterboard, but we highly
recommend them. If you want to do without you’ll have to find a way to secure your LED in the
enclosure. There are plenty of resources for wiring diagrams - search ‘3PDT true bypass wiring’.
In all cases we’re dealing with the same four main connections between your
main circuit board and your footswitch bypass daughterboard:
In V G Out
I or CI The signal being sent to the main circuit
V Your positive power supply, normally 9V DC
G The ground connection
O or CO The output of the main circuit
The other connections on the daughterboard are also the same in each case:
JI The connection to your input jack socket
V Positive connection to the DC power socket
G Negative connection to the DC power socket
JO The output jack socket.
However, not every connection will necessarily be made on the daughterboard depending on the
configuration of the main circuit board and your chosen pedal layout. This will be outlined later.
Identify the daughterboard you have below and click on it to go to that section. The first three utilise
our standard 3PDT or Gørva footswitches, the OptoPuss uses Alpha DPDT switches. The original
3PDT PCB is being phased out as supplies run out, being replaced with the compact version. The
connections are the same for each board but positioned in different places, so we’ll show each in
the following pages.
IMPORTANT - in every variant the Current Limiting Resistor (CLR) should be placed on the
daughterboard. Our older main circuit boards have a space for it,
but you should leave this empty. If your main PCB has a pad
marked LED to the right of the IVGO connections, this is the case.
BYPASS 41
<
3PDT - Original
No battery provision
This board was designed to go with main circuit boards that provide the jack connections on-board.
There are no pads for the jack grounds, so it’s a bit messy to use on ‘normal’ builds. See later.
This all goes on the same side of the PCB as the footswitch.
R1 2K2-4K7
C1 220n
OK1 TLP222G or A*
D1 1N4001
D2 LED**
SW1 Latching DPDT
We’ll only illustrate one of each case here, as the basic principle is the same for every one of our
bypass boards. You simply make the appropriate connections on the main PCB instead of the
daughterboard, and in the case of top-jacks you should use all six of the connecting pads between
the main PCB and the daughterboard.