
Originally Posted by
Marcel
The Fuzz Face kit... Not what I was expecting....
When I first assembled the kit the result was disappointing. There was some Fuzz, however there was also a lot more of spluttering and extended patches of unwanted silence. The fuzz itself was consistent in tone and level just it wasn't consistently there, almost as if I had a loose wire or something. At first I suspected that I had cooked the transistors when I soldered them in. Sadly Germanium transistors can be 'cooked' a lot more easily than their Silicon counterparts. So after downloading data sheets of the supplied Germaium AC128 transistors and getting out my stock of Silicon PNP replacements, I set about to find the real cause of the disappointment to this so far less than impressive build.
I hooked up my little LCD Cro and a signal generator and pushed a clean sine wave through it to see visually what was happening to the signals. On the test bench with signals of 50mV and above it worked "fine", and instantly I realised that there in lay the problem, and that I hadn't cooked the Germaniums. Normal signals from a guitar are not usually that big. What this Fuzz pedal really needs is some clean boost. At the same time I also noticed an induced common mode hum on the screen when I touched the pedals metal housing which indicated the housing wasn't earthed, so I replaced the output jack with a different type which cleared that problem.
I patched in the compressor kit pedal before the Fuzz... Success!.. And it sounds quite okay. Not too harsh, Has musical aspects to notes/chords played through it. Interestingly and despite its short comings the compressor kit pedal seems well suited to drive the Fuzz Face kit pedal as a good range of tones can be dialled up using both together... Note to self - always use a pre drive or level boost pedal with this Fuzz Face kit pedal.
One thing I needed to get used to is the Fuzz pedal does mute when volumes from the guitar get a bit low which can be useful in some scenarios but also can get very annoying. Keep the strings moving and you get consistent noise from the amp, let notes ring out and they will Fuzz until they suddenly (but predictably) die.
So I got all 3 kit pedals working. None are as good as any commercially made pedal but certainly good enough to make practice noises at home. All 3 sound different to commercially made units which if I was chasing tone of another guitarist would make most of them a big fat fail, however if they were in use by a guitarist/writer they do offer(force) options in tone that would push certain writing styles. Of the 3 kits I favour the distortion kit pedal with the picture of the Dragon as it has the best range of sounds that I like, with the Fuzz in at 2nd and the compressor 3rd as it gave the most disappointing result.
For those who are interested, On my home 'just for fun' setup I typically run 7 pedals, For the moment the reverb pedal from earlier in this thread has displaced my Nux Time Core as my 2nd delay pedal, and of all things the Dragon Distortion kit has displaced my TS9. Other pedals in my line up between my usual LP (and increasingly the ES-1TL) to the JVM210 are a Dunlop JH-1 Wah, a PolyTune 3, a TC Electronics Sub-n-up, a Joyo Vintage Phase and a CatalineBread Echorec. ... Go figure...