The ever popular switching Problem - Loud pop when I engage effect (Mudbunny)

Started by upthepunxxx, July 14, 2014, 04:27:57 PM

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upthepunxxx

Hey Brosiffs! I built my 2nd Mudbunny, and am getting that classic loud pop when I engage the effect. I don't remember the first build doing this, but I could be way wrong (had my amp up pretty loud last night). Anyways, from my novice vantage point I looked at the schem and it looks like  R1 is acting as a pulldown resistor. I also added a 1 meg resistor on the switch from input lug to ground to see if that would help, but it din't seem to work out. I figured I would run it by you guys before I submitted to the fact that thats just the way it is.

Also is it normal to loose a little volume when turning the tone control CW? I built the board to Green Russian specs. Anyways, I hope all you cholos & cholas are getting ready to watch Yasiel Puig dominate the Home Run Derby tonight!

Stay PUnk!
Wake up and smell the noise!!

jimilee

No, volume loss isn't normal. If you put that 1m across the inout jack from tip to sleeve, that will work as a pulldown. My mudbunny doesn't pop either, may need to start a debugging thread, also does it happen on every amp with every guitar?
Pedal building is like the opposite of sex.  All the fun stuff happens before you get in the box.

madbean

You should not lose volume with the tone pot. In fact, when you turn it clockwise you will perceive it as louder when working correctly. This is actually more of an auditory illusion due to how our ears hear high and low frequencies.

Also, let me caution against putting a 1M resistor on the input jack as jimilee suggested. Doing so would introduce the resistor into your bypass signal which could load your bypass signal. There is already a pulldown on the circuit board so this should not be necessary.

jimilee

Quote from: madbean on July 14, 2014, 06:08:17 PM
You should not lose volume with the tone pot. In fact, when you turn it clockwise you will perceive it as louder when working correctly. This is actually more of an auditory illusion due to how our ears hear high and low frequencies.

Also, let me caution against putting a 1M resistor on the input jack as jimilee suggested. Doing so would introduce the resistor into your bypass signal which could load your bypass signal. There is already a pulldown on the circuit board so this should not be necessary.
Yep, I thought about that, and with a pull down in there already, there's a bigger problem, leaky cap?
Pedal building is like the opposite of sex.  All the fun stuff happens before you get in the box.

the3secondrule

Check your input and output caps are the right way around. This has got me a few times before...
"I have many leatherbound books, and my apartment smells of rich mahogany"

upthepunxxx

I brought it to work today and am going to plug it into some different amps and axes and see if it is still doing it. Thanks Jimilee!

Quote from: jimilee on July 14, 2014, 06:00:57 PM
No, volume loss isn't normal. If you put that 1m across the inout jack from tip to sleeve, that will work as a pulldown. My mudbunny doesn't pop either, may need to start a debugging thread, also does it happen on every amp with every guitar?
Wake up and smell the noise!!

upthepunxxx

Yea I was kinda thinking that. I mean I just built one a couple weeks ago for my friends B-day and don't remember any of these problems. Just need to figure out what i did wrong!

Quote from: madbean on July 14, 2014, 06:08:17 PM
You should not lose volume with the tone pot. In fact, when you turn it clockwise you will perceive it as louder when working correctly. This is actually more of an auditory illusion due to how our ears hear high and low frequencies.

Also, let me caution against putting a 1M resistor on the input jack as jimilee suggested. Doing so would introduce the resistor into your bypass signal which could load your bypass signal. There is already a pulldown on the circuit board so this should not be necessary.
Wake up and smell the noise!!

upthepunxxx

Hey you guys have anymore suggestions on the tone control dropping volume when I turn it clockwise? Which should really be perceived as louder. I broke out the schem and checked all the components around the tone control and everything looked good. I double checked all the resistor values. How would one check for a leaky cap? I realized it is way easier to trouble shoot a pedal when there is absolutely no sound vs pretty much works perfectly but one minor thing. Anyways if anyone has any suggestions let me know. If not no worries, I'll keep plugging away! Thanks homies!!
Wake up and smell the noise!!

jimilee

Not, it's less frustrating when there's no sons than when there is. Have you checked for solder bridges and cold joints?
Pedal building is like the opposite of sex.  All the fun stuff happens before you get in the box.

upthepunxxx

Good point. Now that I think about it, it can be pretty demoralizing when no sound comes out. I took my testing rig from Jacobs site and the schematic and  probed every joint and component in order and everything that was suppose to get signal passed signal and everything that was suppose to be ground or power was that. I guess if there was a leaky cap, you would still get signal? I'm gonna try again after bowling League tonight.
I'm gonna recheck the values as well. Maybe a once over on all the joints ain't a bad idea too. Thanks jimilee!

Quote from: jimilee on July 27, 2014, 05:24:56 PM
Not, it's less frustrating when there's no sons than when there is. Have you checked for solder bridges and cold joints?
Wake up and smell the noise!!

upthepunxxx

I was thinking about just desoldering all the components near and around the tone pot and resolder all new fresh components and see if that fixed the volume loss on the tone pot problem. If that doesnt work I may have to walk away from this one for a while. This one has really got the best of me. I think the worst part is that I successfully built a great one a month before...Anyways, stay up playas!
Wake up and smell the noise!!

hubb

Did you ever figure out the popping problem?

I'm having the same issue myself.  I have the 2013 edition, and I couldn't find a wiring diagram so I used the old one, which is cool except there is an extra ground connection (or at least I think so) on  the 2013 ed.  the ground connection between the input and output leads wasn't connected initially.   I've now connected it to the center-bottom of the switch and it still pops.

Do i need to worry about stuff grounding to the case?

-c

upthepunxxx

Honestly I cant remember? From re-reading my previous post it looks like I may have walked away in frustration. I was having problems with the tone pot too. That build was all kinds of messed up. Ill pull it out and check it when I get home tonight and let you know if I ever figured it out.


Quote from: hubb on November 17, 2014, 05:35:52 PM
Did you ever figure out the popping problem?

I'm having the same issue myself.  I have the 2013 edition, and I couldn't find a wiring diagram so I used the old one, which is cool except there is an extra ground connection (or at least I think so) on  the 2013 ed.  the ground connection between the input and output leads wasn't connected initially.   I've now connected it to the center-bottom of the switch and it still pops.

Do i need to worry about stuff grounding to the case?

-c
Wake up and smell the noise!!

m-Kresol

Quote from: hubb on November 17, 2014, 05:35:52 PM
Did you ever figure out the popping problem?

I'm having the same issue myself.  I have the 2013 edition, and I couldn't find a wiring diagram so I used the old one, which is cool except there is an extra ground connection (or at least I think so) on  the 2013 ed.  the ground connection between the input and output leads wasn't connected initially.   I've now connected it to the center-bottom of the switch and it still pops.

Do i need to worry about stuff grounding to the case?

-c

I'm not sure that I understand you correctly but here's a few things on ground:
your enclosure is supposed to be on ground level. Use a multimeter (continuity checker or voltmeter) and check if your enclosure is on ground if you're not sure. Metal framed jacks, which are most commonly used, are connect the enclosure to the sleeve, which is ground.
There are often more ground pads on the board than are really necessary. They are there for your convenience as builders will have their power jacks at top or side or use isolated jacks. Normally you just need one to hook up the ground from the power plug, one to go to the stomp (or not, you can wire it from the plug too if you want) and maybe one or two for in/out jacks (as I said, normally they connect the enclosure to ground and therefore the other jack's sleeve too, so one would suffice).
As you can see, there are many ways to hook up the ground properly, so it might just be that you have a spare pad on the board.

hope that helps, cheers
I build pedals to hide my lousy playing.

My projects are labeled Quantum Effects. My shared OSH park projects: https://oshpark.com/profiles/m-Kresol
My build docs and tutorials

hubb

Thanks for the clarification.  I wired up both ground pads and the jacks are metal. I'll test them for ground.

I'll look for some solder bridges too, check the switch wiring. 

Thanks again guys.