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Author Topic: All-in-one Analog Multieffect  (Read 993 times)
myonus
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« on: November 22, 2011, 01:51:59 PM »

hello,  in reference to the All-in-one Analog Multieffect listed in the eaced you placed several individual pedals in one box.  Did you come across any difficulties with matching power supplies? or meeting the needs of different voltage requirements?  I am making a similar product,  however I plan to have 2 tube pedals at approx 150 volts each, 3- 9 volt pedals,  and a 12 volt analog sequencer.  any suggestions?  aside from the major shock hazzard,  and becoming the first and last one to use this combanation.  


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myonus
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« Reply #1 on: November 22, 2011, 02:45:54 PM »

All the pedals I used just used normal 9V DC power supplies; it was easy.  For yours, I'd imagine you'd need a separate supply for the tube pedals, a separate one for the 9V pedals, and a separate one for the 12V supply.  At best, you'll have a single AC wall cable coming from your multieffect.

-Colin
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The best way to learn is to experiment.  Try it first, then learn from what went wrong.

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myonus
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« Reply #2 on: November 22, 2011, 04:15:33 PM »

Thanks Colin, 

another thing,  when you linked them together with the bypass switches,  was there any special consideration for TRS to TS  linked to TRS again?  most of the pedals schematics im using involve a TRS on the input to trigger the voltage/ power.

thanks again for your advice  Grin
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myonus
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« Reply #3 on: November 24, 2011, 09:28:16 AM »

I think what you're referring to is that many pedals use the sleeve of the input jack to enable/disable the battery.  Just ignore this - wire it so that the power supply is always connected, and wire every input jack as a TS mono jack (assuming all the pedals you're using aren't using TRS as a stereo input, which is rare).

-Colin
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The best way to learn is to experiment.  Try it first, then learn from what went wrong.

http://www.eaced.com
http://www.experimentalistsanonymous.com
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