I think you will get some interesting results with this in the Champ circuit. I played around with some values and landed on what you see below to put the scoop at 400Hz. Of course you should experiment a bit for yourself. For that purpose, get a 1/2W resistor kit from Amazon or eBay so you have a range of values on hand to try, and get a handful of 500-600V caps in common values (a couple of each from 1n to 100n film, and 50p to 820p ceramic or mica).
Gregg Hermetech wrote: ↑Thu Oct 19, 2023 9:14 am
1) The online TSC shows that with the pot at 10, nothing happens, it's like NOT having the EQ in the circuit. Will this actually be the case? What would the insertion loss of those components likely be, either in level, or frequency response?
An isolated simulation as in TSC lacks context and therefore misses interactions with adjacent components. You will lose some highs above 1k. Lifting the resistor to ground will eliminate that, but shorting the pot
and lifting the resistor with a DPDP pull switch pot would allow keeping a setting and switching it in and out.
Gregg Hermetech wrote: ↑Thu Oct 19, 2023 9:15 am
2) Where exactly in the amp schematic would it be wisest to fit this pot? (See schematic in original post). Between the C1 coupling cap and the Volume control VR1, or directly after VR1? Or later in the circuit directly after the C2 coupling cap before the power stage?
I'd go with placing it after the volume pot output as shown below.
Gregg Hermetech wrote: ↑Thu Oct 19, 2023 9:15 am
3) The online TSC shows that with the pot at minimum you have maximum attenuation of frequencies, and with the pot at maximum you essentially have it bypassed/zero attenuation. I'd like it to be the opposite way round. i.e. pot at minimum = no effect, pot at maximum = most effect. Is this possible, and if so how?
Connect the CCW terminal of the pot to the volume pot wiper and then CW rotation will bring on the mid scoop. An audio or linear pot will work for this, but IMO the best option would be a 30% J-taper pot.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.