mrpicard wrote:BJF wrote:The first pedal I made on order was a tremolo for a guy that wanted to not have to drag a Music Man amp along with his Marshall halfstack just for tremolo on one song.
This tremolo:
Hi,
Ah well that particurlar tremolo I originally built to use as a sign for my workshop and yes it's a working unit using a similar circuit to Saffron Yellow Tremolo.
The first tremolo I built though used a different circuit- something I easily could have buitl with tubes: a differiental stage one side working as amplifier and the other as oscillator input and that being fed by a phaseshift oscillator
Here are some thoughts I wrote for another forum but related and I don't think I'll post it elsewhere:
The oscillators used in Fender amps such as blackface,silverface,tweed are all phaseshift types that produce sinewave and so are the oscillator used in Shaller Tremolo et.c.
However on blackface and silverface Fenders the lamp driver may or may not have sinewave on the cathode but can have one side hardclipped. The photocell can only vary with a sinewave in a defined range of light and now when exposed to light outside the span the photocell is saturated for a short duration.
This means that the photocell may vary with a complex waveform in the mentioned amps depending on the workingpoint of the lampdriver.Also when the waveform is clipped a ticking sound will be heard through the audiopath since then the drawn current is reflected onto the powersupply or B+.
Setting the lampdriver for a clean sinewave greatly reduces the level of the ticking and also a more seemless tremoloeffect.Now as the workingpoint for the stage feeding the tremolocoupler (photocell) is directly affected by the sway of the photocell and also due to the load of the Depth control allready would be set quite sharply the tremolo effect may still sound hard, while this can be change by isolating the photocell and connecting the depth control in series with the photocell, such as would be done in many Gibson amplifiers.
The most enchanting tremolo I have ever heard came from a Premier amplifier that had a phaseshiftoscillator driving a balanced differential stage so the carrierwave was near fully cancelled from the audiopath, which left no audiable clue that the tremolo was on but only heard when you played through the amplifier..........
That a difference in trianglewave or sinewave modulated tremoloes can be heard I would personally think would be true while it is also felt in how the modulation interacts with played notes.
Now squarewave is on/off like you can do on a Les Paul or similar using the pick up toggle.......
Tremolo though can be such that it crabs your shoulders and shakes you......
Actually I thought a lot about tremolo as it was one of the first effects I was asked to build and also a common effect on many amps I played back then and I thought then how this effect could be incorporated and possibly more useful than just for obvious on/off and what would make me like the effect.............
Have great fun
BJ