William Gaatjes
Lifer
- May 11, 2008
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One more thing you should know, because the whole success of your amplifier / effects processor will depend upon it. It is most undesirable to have a loud "pop / click" noise when you turn your pre-amplifier / guitar effect processor while connected to the PA amplifier. Because this can kill speakers and PA amplifiers and makes for a very disturbing "bang" to the audience. The audio technicians will not like you after such an event, i can promise you that.
Always make sure that your electronic device has support electronics added with it that prevent such "pop / click" sounds at powerup and powerdown.
I should note that although the example circuit i made works, it is far from ideal. At powerup, the - input of the opamp is held at 0,82V because of the empty 100uF capacitor C3. The +input is held at almost ~2,5V. Because of the empty 10uF capacitor C1 and the high output impedance of the guitar element.
Thus the output of the opamp may at powerup swing from 0V to +9V for a moment because the +input is more positive then the - input.
You may hear this as a loud pop noise at power up.
The output dc level should stabilize at 0V within 250ms after powerup with a 10kΩ resistor load. It might be a good idea to add this resistor at the output since most amplifiers have an input impedance of about 50kΩ.
It seems that the 100uF capacitor C3 in combination with the LT1490 has the effect in the simulation to not create a powerup "pop or click" noise.
I do not know if this is a simulation error or not.
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