NancyJohnson Posted November 21, 2024 Posted November 21, 2024 I don't have a bass available to try this but has anyone experimented with onboard passive distortion circuitry? In theory, it should be as simply as wiring a couple of diodes into a potentiometer, as shown by Josi's post below. Quote
tauzero Posted November 21, 2024 Posted November 21, 2024 They'd have to be germanium diodes, and you'd need pretty hot pickups as they'd need to output more than 200mV which is where Ge diodes start conducting. I have in the past built an active version of this in a guitar with a transistor amplifying the signal so it was pushed to > 200mV, and then took it out again because it sounded shit. 1 1 Quote
Hellzero Posted November 21, 2024 Posted November 21, 2024 It's what Marshall used to do in their Valvestate series if this helps answering your "question"... Quote
NancyJohnson Posted November 21, 2024 Author Posted November 21, 2024 3 hours ago, tauzero said: They'd have to be germanium diodes, and you'd need pretty hot pickups as they'd need to output more than 200mV which is where Ge diodes start conducting. I have in the past built an active version of this in a guitar with a transistor amplifying the signal so it was pushed to > 200mV, and then took it out again because it sounded shit. I saw this whole concept come through on Facebook earlier today and watched a short video from a European guy who'd done the wiring to an Epiphone SG and showed the process on a Strat of some kind. The SG (w/humbuckers) did sound quite mushy, but the Strat just sounded like it was being played hard through a clean amp (giving some clipping, which the user was able to control but rolling the pot on and off). Naturally I wondered whether the wiring/process would convert to a bass. Quote
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