This one was a lot of offboard wiring...too much. Glad it worked. Cool stuff but too much for me.


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Quote from: mjg on December 19, 2016, 09:12:57 AM
Yeah, label it as 'Not Reverb'.
In terms of a battery - why not stick in a couple 1.5v coin cell batteries such as LR44? They're pretty small, and yep, you could simply just use another pole of the 3PDT switch. That would be much simpler than my transistor solution!
A 3v supply would be enough to power an LED, probably without a resistor needed.


Quote from: mjg on December 18, 2016, 10:29:33 PM
My approach would be to breadboard it and see what happens. But that may be a bit difficult, as you have to try it out in a shop somewhere?
I think it would work, for what that's worth. :-) If the LED is working at the moment, just at the wrong time, a 'not' gate should do the trick. Although you may have to supply power to the LED from somewhere else if the relay is cutting the power to the footswitch when you want it on...? Which would mean a battery in your box just to power the LED maybe?
Quote from: mjg on December 18, 2016, 09:12:46 PM
If the reverb switching works, but the LED is showing the wrong state, I don't think it's your wiring causing the issue. Sounds like the relay is set up at the other end to send voltage when the effect is off.
You could get around that by using a transistor to make a 'not' gate, and hook the LED up to that. That would reverse the state of the LED anyway.
Quote from: alanp on December 17, 2016, 07:53:28 PM
Also, with the resistor on the single jack-stomp setup, I'd insulate that leg or do something to ensure it doesn't touch the switches middle pin, if I were you. It looks like it's touching, but even if it isn't, that's sailing closer to the wind than I'd like.
Quote from: Stomptown on December 17, 2016, 07:50:00 PM
During testing, are you positive you are plugging the stereo cable into the correct jack accounting for it being on the opposite side when flipping the enclosure over?

