Resistance between red and black is close to 3k. Between any of the others is either 1.5M or 3M.
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Show posts MenuQuote from: Rockhorst on August 06, 2018, 03:08:27 PMthe "small cap and resistor"...the cap to block DC and the resistor to act with the pot as a voltage divider? or do they serve other functions? With the cap and resistor in series I don't have to worry about the cap and potentiometer becoming a high pass filter correct?
Use the buffer for the input and follow it with a small series cap and resistor and end with two volume pots. You won't have a buffered output (but you could use the other side of the opamp for that if that is what you want). You can switch only the wipers (influences taper and impedance) or wiper and terminal 3. In any case, pin 1 of both pots is always connected to ground, sucking up the DC build up.
Quote from: blearyeyes on February 05, 2018, 01:15:12 AMLink worked. I'm missing something though. Why can't I probe at pin 6 and hear what is being fed into the negative input pin?Quote from: PhiloB on February 04, 2018, 01:51:36 PMhttp://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/rc4558.pdf
I built a basic op-amp overdrive last night and got very low output but everything sounded and functioned well otherwise. I decided to use my audio probe to see where the output dropped and discovered there was no audio at PIN 6 (JRC4558) and very low output at PIN 7. I decided it was probably the resistor in the negative feedback loop and found out I had some 1k resistors in my 22k bag. Problem solved.
But now I'm confused as to why I don't get audio with my probe at the input (PIN 6) but I do at the output (PIN 7). Can someone help me understand why I can't "hear" the signal at PIN6?
To keep it Madbean, here is a similar schematic:
Here's the spec sheet. If the link works.
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