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Why do effects pedals drain the battery when bypassed?


tedmanzie
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Sorry, this is one of those 'why don't polar bears get cold feet' type questions. Can someone please put me out of my misery?

Q: Why do effects pedals drain the battery when bypassed?

So to be clear, I have left my lead plugged overnight into the 'in' socket of a Maxon OD9 Pro+ (true bypass apparently), and even though the pedal is 'off' the battery is dead the following morning.

I have killed loads of 9v batteries like this. One of these days I'll get one of those power brick things...

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[quote name='bertbass' timestamp='1412155770' post='2566127']
Once you plug into the input the power is switched on and will stay on until you unplug it again. The input socket is also the on / off switch. The bypass switch only bypasses the signal, not the power.
[/quote]

Yep, the pedal's busy distorting/delaying/chorusing even when the effects not engaged.

The sound of flanged silence !

Edited by ahpook
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A decent pedal should have:

3 pole switch, 2 poles to give true bypass and 1 to kill the power when OFF.
Stereo jack on the input so that the pedal is only powered when plugged in by connecting the ring to the sleeve.
If there is a 9V power in socket. it should drop out the 9V battery (if fitted). Sockets usually have a switch contact for this.
And possibly a LED to show it is on.

I suspect item 1 is only a 2 pole switch and only provides bypass. 3 pole switches are more difficult to find, but are available. But not really necessary if there is no battery.

Having said that, my home built Fuzz and Octavia both have a 2 pole switch and run from battery. Doh!

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[quote name='pfretrock' timestamp='1412158782' post='2566183']
A decent pedal should have:

3 pole switch, 2 poles to give true bypass and 1 to kill the power when OFF.
[/quote]

Alot of pedals use a 3 pole, 2 for bypass and 1 for LED. To use 1 to kill power you would usualy have to wither sacrifice an led or up the production costs quite a bit for batery life. bearing in mind most users will run off of a dedicated supply, id say this would be unnecessary.

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Killing the power would also kill the LED though.

Will simulatenously switching to the effect and powering up the circuit may introduce a slight delay until the sound comes through? Or introduce pops? That would explain why everyone chooses to have the effect running constantly and just switched in and out when needed.

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[quote name='ahpook' timestamp='1412157465' post='2566158']
Yep, the pedal's busy distorting/delaying/chorusing even when the effects not engaged.

The sound of flanged silence !
[/quote]

I see, that makes sense.
Thanks for all the replies :)

I do actually have a decent 9v power supply that gets shared around, but I need to get a daisy chain thing! :unsure:

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If you're going to get a power supply, I can recommend the Harley Benton Powerplant Junior from Thomann.

Its ~£30 posted and gives you five isolated 9v power outputs. This is meant to be less susceptible to noise/hum than daisychaining a single power supply.

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[quote name='mingsta' timestamp='1412174010' post='2566451']
If you're going to get a power supply, I can recommend the Harley Benton Powerplant Junior from Thomann.

Its ~£30 posted and gives you five isolated 9v power outputs. This is meant to be less susceptible to noise/hum than daisychaining a single power supply.
[/quote]

good tip thanks

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You can run 10 pedals off one of these;
[url="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B000NVU9GG/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_dp_ss_1?pf_rd_p=479289247&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=B007VC042O&pf_rd_m=A3P5ROKL5A1OLE&pf_rd_r=01RNZRWFVPKDQVTK9BRY"]http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B000NVU9GG/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_dp_ss_1?pf_rd_p=479289247&pf_rd_s=lpo-top-stripe&pf_rd_t=201&pf_rd_i=B007VC042O&pf_rd_m=A3P5ROKL5A1OLE&pf_rd_r=01RNZRWFVPKDQVTK9BRY[/url]
But I suspect the logistics/relative sizes of pedals would probably limit that. I have one with a 5 way ouput I got from maplins years ago and then got separate cables to run from it to my pedals. Currently only use 3, only 1 of those is a genuine effect which I don't even use every gig. Other option is a decent battery charger and plenty of recharchable batteries so you always have spares ready to go, the 9v rechargables can get a bit pricey though.

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[quote name='dannybuoy' timestamp='1412159816' post='2566205']
Killing the power would also kill the LED though.

Will simulatenously switching to the effect and powering up the circuit may introduce a slight delay until the sound comes through? Or introduce pops? That would explain why everyone chooses to have the effect running constantly and just switched in and out when needed.
[/quote]

Any 'true' true bypass switch will produce pops i believe, to avoid them you have to have a relay IIRC.

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