Pink Unicorn Horsey
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Re: Pics of the original 808 (big pics)
What does that mean?
Even back then the solder was done by a bath.
What does that mean?
Even back then the solder was done by a bath.
What does that mean?
Ah...eh...uh...buh....at those voltagelevels....only if the caps and chips are really crappy you can hear alot of difference, mostly it is just a matter of turning the knobs some....
Anyways some of the first ones had single OP-Amps, so they had to use two...they sound alittle flatter then your average TS....
But 4558s are mostly different in volume....not the most good sounding OP-Amp out there
But that is just personal preferences...
I agree ... the 4558 is a very gritty-sounding op amp IMO. But people want them because that's what was in the holy 808 ...
Keep in mind Maxon didn't use one or another op amp because they sounded the best - they used them because they were the cheapest op amps that worked in this pedal.
Exactly. The TL072 is actually a lower noise and better sounding chip in the TS circuit but it's also more expensive than the 4558. In low voltage circuits, IMO, it's the tolerances that have more of an influence on the final sound rather than the type. Now, a film cap that actually passes the signal from point A to point B is the better option over ceramic caps in most cases. Shunting the signal to ground, anything will work there.
If you want a really nice op amp that sounds great in almost any pedal, the Burr Brown OPA2134PA is the Rolls Royce of op amps. They're typically around $5 each (compared to most op amps that cost less than a buck), but it's what you need if you want that "boutique", almost amp-like feel from a pedal.
I agree on the caps - metal film anywhere you have signal going towards the output will take a lot of grit out of the sound. Diodes and op amps are important, but caps will make or break a pedal.