GB2149954A - Distortion circuit - Google Patents

Distortion circuit Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2149954A
GB2149954A GB08430230A GB8430230A GB2149954A GB 2149954 A GB2149954 A GB 2149954A GB 08430230 A GB08430230 A GB 08430230A GB 8430230 A GB8430230 A GB 8430230A GB 2149954 A GB2149954 A GB 2149954A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
circuit
terminal
output
output signal
distortion
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Granted
Application number
GB08430230A
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GB8430230D0 (en
GB2149954B (en
Inventor
Jack C Sondermeyer
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Peavey Electronics Corp
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Peavey Electronics Corp
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Publication date
Priority claimed from US06/268,647 external-priority patent/US4405832A/en
Application filed by Peavey Electronics Corp filed Critical Peavey Electronics Corp
Priority to GB08430230A priority Critical patent/GB2149954B/en
Publication of GB8430230D0 publication Critical patent/GB8430230D0/en
Publication of GB2149954A publication Critical patent/GB2149954A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2149954B publication Critical patent/GB2149954B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04RLOUDSPEAKERS, MICROPHONES, GRAMOPHONE PICK-UPS OR LIKE ACOUSTIC ELECTROMECHANICAL TRANSDUCERS; DEAF-AID SETS; PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEMS
    • H04R3/00Circuits for transducers, loudspeakers or microphones
    • H04R3/04Circuits for transducers, loudspeakers or microphones for correcting frequency response
    • GPHYSICS
    • G10MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; ACOUSTICS
    • G10HELECTROPHONIC MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS; INSTRUMENTS IN WHICH THE TONES ARE GENERATED BY ELECTROMECHANICAL MEANS OR ELECTRONIC GENERATORS, OR IN WHICH THE TONES ARE SYNTHESISED FROM A DATA STORE
    • G10H1/00Details of electrophonic musical instruments
    • G10H1/02Means for controlling the tone frequencies, e.g. attack or decay; Means for producing special musical effects, e.g. vibratos or glissandos
    • G10H1/06Circuits for establishing the harmonic content of tones, or other arrangements for changing the tone colour
    • G10H1/16Circuits for establishing the harmonic content of tones, or other arrangements for changing the tone colour by non-linear elements
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03FAMPLIFIERS
    • H03F1/00Details of amplifiers with only discharge tubes, only semiconductor devices or only unspecified devices as amplifying elements
    • H03F1/32Modifications of amplifiers to reduce non-linear distortion
    • H03F1/3241Modifications of amplifiers to reduce non-linear distortion using predistortion circuits
    • H03F1/3264Modifications of amplifiers to reduce non-linear distortion using predistortion circuits in audio amplifiers
    • H03F1/327Modifications of amplifiers to reduce non-linear distortion using predistortion circuits in audio amplifiers to emulate discharge tube amplifier characteristics
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03FAMPLIFIERS
    • H03F1/00Details of amplifiers with only discharge tubes, only semiconductor devices or only unspecified devices as amplifying elements
    • H03F1/32Modifications of amplifiers to reduce non-linear distortion
    • H03F1/3241Modifications of amplifiers to reduce non-linear distortion using predistortion circuits
    • H03F1/3276Modifications of amplifiers to reduce non-linear distortion using predistortion circuits using the nonlinearity inherent to components, e.g. a diode

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Nonlinear Science (AREA)
  • Acoustics & Sound (AREA)
  • Multimedia (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Amplifiers (AREA)

Abstract

A circuit for distorting an input signal comprising amplifier means 10 for receiving the said input signal and producing an output signal, and distortion means 40 having a first terminal 31 connected to receive the said output signal to distort it, and a second terminal A connected to a switch 28 for selectively connecting the second terminal to a ground voltage or to a voltage which depends on the said output signal. The distortion means distorts the said output signal when the said second terminal is connected to ground and does not distort the said output signal when the said second terminal is connected to the voltage which depends on the said output signal. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Distortion circuit This invention relates to preamplifiers for use with musical instruments, and more particularly to such preamplifiers having circuitry for simulating a vacuum tube amplifier including the distortion produced by such amplifiers.
Musical instrument amplifiers, traditionally incorporating vacuum tube devices, have been used with various instruments for quite some time. Electric guitars, for example, which generate essentially a "clean" or undistorted sinewave, were among the first instruments to rely heavily on vacuum tube amplification. Such amplification was typically faithful to the sound generated by the guitar, which was thus faithfully reproduced on an associated speaker.
Because vacuum tubes are inherently forgiving devices, operable in almost any circuit design, various inexpensive and amateruish design techniques began to be used with the vacuum tube amplifiers. The use of poor designs, marginal components such as cheap transformers, and the like led to a proliferation of amplifiers providing distortion caused by poor gain balancing and restricted ranges of linear operation. As a result, premature clipping or overdriving of various stages within the amplifier took place. The transformers similarly provided their own distortion to the output signal, due to saturation, for example.
The distorted output of such vacuum tube amplifiers, however, became appreciated and desired, particularly for rock 'n roll music of the later 1 960's.
Thus it was that the guitar became, effectively, an inexpensive synthesizer wherein the sine waves generated by the guitar were transformed into square waves by amplifier clipping. The amplifier's overload, equalization, damping factor and loudspeaker response characteristics ultimately determined the output sound. Such output sound differed from the conventional clean guitar heard in early rock'n roll, country, surfing music, and the like. Rather, a ready quality was produced, resembling, for example, the reedy sound of a woodwind instrument such as a clarinet in response to insertion of a single sustained note into the amplifier.
In the past one to two decades, the above described output sound has become identified with a "good" electrical guitar sound, and several attempts have been made to reproduce this sound with transistorized circuits.
Moog patent 4,180,707, for example, discloses a "fuzz box" for producing four types of clipping. Only two clipping levels are provided, however, defined therein as "soft" and "hard" clipping. Further, with no attempt at changing the frequency characteristic of the amplifier, the disclosed circuit cannot truly simulate a vacuum tube amplifier.
Jahns patent 3,973,461 discloses a vacuum tube circuit for providing varying degrees of distortion, and an essentially identical solid state circuit for replacing the tube. The circuit fails to provide compensation for increased gain by variation of frequency response, and generally does not combine gain, frequency response variation and distortion.
Laub patent 3,835,409 discloses an amplifier for use with electric guitars for introducing crossover distortion proportional to the amplitude of the input signal, otherwise suffering from the same defects of the prior art.
It is accordingly an aim of the present invention to overcome the deficiencies of the prior art and to provide a circuit for introducing gain, overload characteristics, and frequency response modification into a musical instrument amplifier.
It is a further aim of the invention to provide a single control for substantially simuitaneous variation of gain and clipping characteristics of a distortion circuit.
It is yet another aim of the invention to provide a single control for substantially simultaneous variation of gain and frequency response of a distortion circuit.
Still another aim of the invention is the provision of a circuit for distorting an applied audio signal to a preselected degree, and including a separate control for removing or inserting the preselected degree of distortion.
According to the present invention, there is provided a circuit for distorting an input signal comprising amplifier means for receiving the said input signal and producing an output signal, and distortion means having a first terminal connected to receive the said output signal to distort it, and a second terminal connected to a switch for selectively connecting the second voltage which substantially equals the said output signal, whereby the distortion means distorts the said output signal when the said second terminal is connected to ground and does not distort the said output signal when the said second terminal is connected to the voltage which substantially equals the said outut signal.
Preferably, the said distortion circuit made in accordance with the present invention is illustrated in the accompanying drawings, in which like numbers refer to like parts, and in which: Figure 1 shows the distortion circuit; Figures 2 to 5 are a schematic representations of various portions of the circuit in Fig. 1; Figure 6 shows a volume control circuit for use with the circuit of Fig. 1; and Figure 7 shows a brightness circuit for use with the circuit of Fig. 1.
Referring now to the drawing, the circuit according to the invention is shown in Fig. 1.
Therein it is seen that a high gain operational amplifier 10 receives at its non inverting input terminal 11 an audio input signal from input jack 1 2. The audio signal is typically generated by an electric guitar, although the circuit may, of course, be used with other sources of input signals. The input signal is coupled from jack 1 2 to terminal 11 by a conventional RC circuit, comprising a capacitor C1 and a resistor R1.Capacitor C1 is connected at one terminal to jack 12, and at its other terminal to input terminal 11. Resistor R1 is connected between the junction of capacitor C1 and terminal 11, on the one hand, and ground on the other, to provide a D.C. ground reference for the input terminal 11.
The output of amplifier 10 is provided at an output terminal 1 3. A feedback network 20 couples the output of operational amplifier 10 from its output terminal 1 3 to an inverting input terminal 22.
Feedback network 20 includes a capacitor C2 connected directly between output terminal 1 3 and input terminal 22. A series circuit, including a resistor R2 in series with a parallel combination of a potentiometer R5 and a capacitor C5, is connected across capacitor C2. The potentiometer R5 is connected as a straightforward variable resistance across capacitor C5, having its wiper 24 shorted to one of its terminals 26 in such a manner that complete counterclockwise rotation of the wiper will fully short circuit capacitor C5. The junction between capacitor C5 and resistor R2 is connected through points B and C to a further capacitor C4 in series with a resistor R4, connected to a point A. As shown in the Figure, points B and C are connected to the wiper 24 and terminal 26 of the potentiometer R5, respectively.
Inverting input terminal 22 is connected to a series circuit comprising a capacitor C3 and a resistor R3, which is, in turn, grounded. C3 and R3 provide a predetermined low-frequency roll off for the frequency response characteristic of the operational amplifier, while capacitor C2 is used to determine high-frequency roll-off, as described below. The junction between capacitor C3 and resistor R3 is labelled D, and will be referenced in connection with Fig. 7.
Point A of the feedback network, at the terminal of R4, may be grounded or may float, depending on the condition of a footswitch 28.
The output of amplifier 10 is coupled through capacitor C6 to a mixing potentiometer R6, connected to provide the circuit output at its wiper 30. Terminals 31 and 32 of the potentiometer R6 are connected so that full counterclockwise rotation of the wiper connects wiper 30 to coupling capacitor C6.
A distortion generating circuit, for clipping the signal output from amplifier 10, is generally shown at 40. The present circuit generates clipping distortion by use of anti-parallel diodes D1 and D2. One terminal of circuit 40 is connected to terminal 32 of potentiometer R6, and the other is connected to point A.
In view of the previously described arrangement for potentiometer R6, it is seen that when wiper 30 is rotated fully clockwise, it is connected directly to the distortion generating circuit 40.
General operation of the circuit may be appreciated with reference to Fig. 2, showing a portion of Fig. 1 for ease of comprehension.
As is known in the art, silicon diodes typically provide a forward voltage drop of 0.6 volt when in the conducting mode. Accordingly, when amplifier 10 provides an output voltage which is sinusoidal, such as shown illustratively in Fig. 2, that outout sinusoid will be clipped by distortion circuit 40. That is, the signals at terminal 32 of potentiometer R6 will not exceed a 1.2 volt peak to peak excursion.
Thus, where signals having greater excursions are output by amplifier 10, clipping will take place. The greater the amplitude of the output of amplifier 10, the greater will be the degree of clipping of the waveform by circuit 40. For example, where a 2 V RMS (5.6 V peak-to-peak) sinusoid is output by amplifier 10, a 1.2 volt clipped sinusoid, shown in Fig. 2, will be observed at terminal 32 of R6. It is thus seen that by adjusting the location of wiper 30, the user can obtain at the circuit output (wiper 30) a mix of any ratio of the sinusoid output by amplifier 10 and the clipped waveform output by circuit 40. The ratio may, of course, include only the pure sinusoidal or only the clipped waveform, as desired.
Referring once again to Fig. 1, specifically with emphasis on feedback network 20, it is seen that potentiometer R5 can substantially alter the effect of that network.
As is apparent from Fig. 1, when R5 is in its full counterclockwise setting, capacitor C5 is shorted out, and capacitor C4 and resistor R4 are no longer connected in a feedback path, but rather are directly connected from output terminal 1 3 of amplifier 10 to point A.
The resulting circuit is shown in Fig. 4, and is recognized as being a standard broadband amplifier with feedback resistor R2 and shunt resistor R3. The gain of this circuit is known to be given by the equation R2 Av = 1 + R3, providing a typical gain Av = 8 for values of R2 = 33 Kohm, and R3 = 4.7 Kohm.
The frequency response of the amplifier is provided by capacitors C2 and C3, with capacitor C2 providing high-frequency roll off at a frequency determined by 1 fh = 6.28 (R2 C2) Capacitor C3 provides low frequency roll-off at a 3 db frequency given by f, = 6.28 (R3 C3) For typical capacitive values contemplated for use in the present circuit, C2 = 100 pF and C3 = 2 uF, it is seen that f1 is approximately 1 6 Hz and fh is approximately 50 KHz, typical frequency response for sound amplification.
Placing potentiometer R5 in the full clockwise position results in introduction of the full resistance value R5 into the circuit, shown in Fig. 3 for the case of point A being grounded.
That circuit may be roughly considered as equivalent to a combination of the two circuits shown in Figs. 4 and 5. Thus, a further series feedback resistor R5, and a further shunt resistor R5, are added to the circuit of Fig. 4, resulting in a change in the gain of the amplifier 1 0.
As one rough estimate of the change in gain, the following equation, applying the typical gain equation to the circuit of Fig. 5, shows R5 Av= 1 ±=22 for R5= 10K, R4=470.
R4 In addition to introducing gain for the circuit of amplifier 10, however, rotation of potentiometer R5 to its full clockwise position also introduces reactive impedances C4 and C5 into the circuit, which affect both the low end and the high end of the frequency response characteristic of the amplifier.
For example, with a capacitor C4 = 0.47 uF, the R4 C4 combination provides the added gain at a lower 3 db frequency of approximately 700 Hz. Similarly, with C5 = 0.0068 uF, an upper 3 db frequency is provided by the R5 C5 combination approximately at 2 KHz.
It is thus seen that the added gain is within a narrow bandwidth, providing a combined frequency characteristic having a so-called "bell-shaped curve" centered at approximately 1.3 KHz for the present example. Moreover, the added capacitances interact with the capacitances of Fig. 4 to provide a lowered upper 3db frequency and a raised lower 3db frequency for the entire circuit.
This feature of the present invention is highly desirable in order to simulate the "vacuumtube" distortion of guitar amplifiers.
With saturation of the tube amplifier output transformers, low frequency response is reduced.
Accordingly, by inserting R4 and C4 in the feedback circuit, such a reduction in the lower end of the frequency response of the circuit as previously described simulates the desired effect.
Moreover, since most guitar amplifiers presently available have a high-frequency preemphasis built in, it is necessary to eliminate that preemphasis proportionally with increased gain.
The present circuit, by providing C5 in combination with R5 with increasing gain, achieves precisely this desired result.
As is also seen in Fig. 1, potentiometers R5 and R6 are ganged, so that at full counterclockwise rotation no gain is added and no change in frequency is provided by R5, and no distortion is provided to the output signal by R6. Inreasing clockwise rotation provides for increased gain by insertion of R5, changes in the frequency response as previously described, and an increase in the ratio of clipped to pure waveforms provided to the output, exactly as desired.
As previously mentioned, point A is controllably connected to ground by footswitch 28. As is apparent from Fig. 1, when point A is left floating, neither the diode clipping circuit nor the resistive added gain circuit of R5-R4 is connected to ground, so that neither clipping nor added gain will be provided. That is, by ungrounding point A, the tube-simulation circuitry is defeated, and the circuit is operated in its normal, wide bandwidth low gain condition. A slight increase in gain is retained by action of resistor R5 in conjunction with R2 on resistor R3. However, with R5 and R4 chosen substantially lower than R2 and R3, respectively, such an increase is negligible.
When footswitch 28 grounds point A, however, operation will be as previously described, including gain adjustment, frequency response modification, and distortion addition. Having preset the potentiometer R5 to some desired value, it is seen that the setting need not be destroyed to remove the distortion. Rather, simple activation or deactivation of the footswitch 28, possibly from a remote location, is sufficient to defeat the effect or to provide the distortion at precisely the desired levels.
Referring now to Figs. 6 and 7, additional circuits are shown for inclusion with the circuit of Fig. 1 to provide additional effects.
A broad bandwidth volume control for the entire circuit is shown in Fig. 6, and is obtained by taking the output across a portion of a potentiometer R7 instead of directly from wiper 30 of potentiometer R6. To provide the volume control, resistor R3 is connected to one terminal of R7, rather than to ground, and an added resistor R8 is provided between wiper 30 of R6 and the other terminal of R7. The system output is taken at the junction between resistors R8 and R7. As will be appreciated, when the wiper of R7, which is grounded, is fully in the clockwise position (grounding R3), full output is obtained from wiper 30 by a voltage divider circuit comprising R7 and R8. However, when the wiper of R8 grounds the output terminal of Fig. 6, in the full counterclockwise position, no output is obtained. Varying output levels are obtained for varying settings of potentiometer R7.
Fig. 7 shows a brightness circuit for optional use with the present circuit. This circuit provides optional high frequency boost effects to change the overall tone structure of the instrument sound amplified by the inventive circuit.
Other variations not shown, useful for altering the overall frequency response and potentiometer action of the present circuit, include the possible addition of a 1.5 K-ohm resistor between points B and C of Fig. 1, and a shunting 2.7 K-ohm resistor between the point C and ground.
Typical values of components used in the circuit of Fig. 1 are shown in the following table.
COMPONENT VALUE R1 220 K R2 33 K R3 330 R4 470 R5 10K R6 1 K R7 10K R8 27 K C2 100 pF C3 2 uF C4 0.47 uF C5 0.0068 uF C6 2.2 uF The preceding specification describes the preferred embodiment of the invention as an illustration and not a limitation thereof. It is appreciated that equivalent variations and modifications of the invention will occur to those skilled in the art. For example, instead of single diodes D1 and D2, two diodes in series can be inserted in each leg of the anti-parallel configuration. This doubles the effective signal output of the distortion generating circuit. Such modifications, variations and equivalents are within the scope of the invention as recited with greater particularity in the appended claims, when interpreted to obtain the benefits of all equivalents to which the invention is fairly and legally entitled.

Claims (2)

1. A circuit for distorting an input signal comprising amplifier means for receiving the said input signal and producing an output signal, and distortion means having a first terminal connected to receive the said output signal to distort it, and a second terminal connected to a switch for selectively connecting the second terminal to a ground voltage or to a voltage which substantially equals the said output signal, whereby the distortion means distorts the said output signal when the said second terminal is connected to ground and does not distort the said output signal when the said second terminal is connected to the voltage which substantially equals the said output signal.
2. A circuit according to claim 1, wherein the said distortion means comprises at least one diode.
GB08430230A 1981-05-29 1984-11-30 Distortion circuit Expired GB2149954B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08430230A GB2149954B (en) 1981-05-29 1984-11-30 Distortion circuit

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US06/268,647 US4405832A (en) 1981-05-29 1981-05-29 Circuit for distorting an audio signal
GB08430230A GB2149954B (en) 1981-05-29 1984-11-30 Distortion circuit

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB8430230D0 GB8430230D0 (en) 1985-01-09
GB2149954A true GB2149954A (en) 1985-06-19
GB2149954B GB2149954B (en) 1986-04-23

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1994002934A1 (en) * 1992-07-20 1994-02-03 Pritchard Eric K Semiconductor emulation of vacuum tubes

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US397461A (en) * 1889-02-05 Electric converter
US3812278A (en) * 1972-02-01 1974-05-21 Kustom Electronics Special effect amplifier for electrical musical instruments
GB2035741A (en) * 1978-11-13 1980-06-18 Mesa Eng Inc Music instrument amplifier

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US397461A (en) * 1889-02-05 Electric converter
US3812278A (en) * 1972-02-01 1974-05-21 Kustom Electronics Special effect amplifier for electrical musical instruments
GB2035741A (en) * 1978-11-13 1980-06-18 Mesa Eng Inc Music instrument amplifier

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO1994002934A1 (en) * 1992-07-20 1994-02-03 Pritchard Eric K Semiconductor emulation of vacuum tubes

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB8430230D0 (en) 1985-01-09
GB2149954B (en) 1986-04-23

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Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19970525