Regarding the classic "Tone Bender" fuzz circuit:
Fuzz Central -- Colorsound Tonebender MKII
I'm just curious but how can this circuit even work at all if there is no where for the base current to go?
Specifically, consider Q1. Being PNP with positive ground, is there not a current going from the emitter and out the base that needs a path to the negative supply?
Or am I out of my brain on the train?
Mike
Fuzz Central -- Colorsound Tonebender MKII
I'm just curious but how can this circuit even work at all if there is no where for the base current to go?
Specifically, consider Q1. Being PNP with positive ground, is there not a current going from the emitter and out the base that needs a path to the negative supply?
Or am I out of my brain on the train?
Mike
If you consider Q1's base - emitter junction is acting like a rectifier, letting only half of a sine wave through to its collector. This is capacitively coupled to the next stage, rich in harmonics, for further processing (tuning) to get the rquired sound.🙂
Ah, interesting. So there is actually something behind this "fuzz". And I suppose it's rather important that the transistor be Germanium with it's 0.2 V drop since the range of the guitar signal is probably only ~2 Vpp (and that's when you're really banging on it). And since the input impedance of this circuit is probably low with no Re, I wonder if the coupling cap is charging up at all to bias Q1 as a function of signal power.

Edit: Moved
Many germanium transistors would pass a distorted signal without any bias at all. Even the ones with bias and DC feedback like the Vox Tonebender responded differently to different transistors. I still have one of the two transistor versions that I made in the late 60's. It used transistors borrowed from an old Sony radio. I put sockets in the board and swapped until I got the sound I wanted.
Also remember that most of the germanium transistors of the day had leakage currents around 1 mA, which also varied considerably with temperature. That's why the old fuzz boxes sound different when cold.
Also remember that most of the germanium transistors of the day had leakage currents around 1 mA, which also varied considerably with temperature. That's why the old fuzz boxes sound different when cold.
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