The
Fat 'n' Pretty is a two channel optical compressor/overdrive
that sounds great.
It's based on a circuit that Johan
Blomdahl
dubbed the LA-Light, because he designed to mimick the
functional blocks of the well known LA2A Leveling Amplifier
(compressor). Johan's design is best suited to line
level input signals, and he mostly uses it for vocals.
Here is what Johan's original design looks like:
LA-Light
schematic
My
goal was to modify the circuit to make it useful for
low level signals (bass, guitar, etc.) while retaining
the original functionality for line level inputs. I
also wanted to minimize the amount of wiring to keep
the assembly as simple as possible. So, I designed a
layout that incorporates PCB mounted potentiometers.
Along
the way, Johan pointed out that the LEDs in the sidechain
were in a typical clipping orientation, and suggested
the posibillity of getting a second, distorted output
from the LEDs. Well, of course, he was right. So, after
some tinkering, re-arranging, and modifying, this is
what I came up with:
Fat
'n' Pretty schematic Fat
'n' Pretty PCB layout Fat
'n' Pretty PCB transfer
The
second stompswitch selects between either the compressor
(Fat) signal, or the overdrive (Pretty) signal for the
main output. There are two pannel mounted bi-color LEDs.
One is the on/off status indicator. The other is the
threshold indicator, indicating both the amount of signal
attenuation in the (Fat) compressor section, and the
degree of clipping that is occurring in the sidechain
(Pretty) overdrive section. When the Fat compressor
output is selected, both LEDs are green and the green
knob sets the output level. When the Pretty overdrive
output is selected, both LEDs are red and the red knob
sets the output level. The two knobs can be set so that
the output level sounds the same when switching between
Fat and Pretty, or so that there is a boost when switching
from one channel to the other.
The
Fat 'n' Pretty has a variable gain input buffer that
allows the response, sensitivity to be adjusted to suit
different level inputs such as line/low level or instruments
with active/passive electronics. There is also enough
gain to overdrive the circuit in either Fat or Pretty
mode. The threshold and ratio controls, which do what
you'd expect them to do for a compressor, allow a very
wide range of different character overdrive sounds to
be produced. It's lots of fun to play with.
The
Fat compressor output is both very tweakable and transparent
at the same time. It does warm up the input a bit, in
a very nice way. But, there is a range of tame compression
settings that you might not notice until you turn it
off. At the other end of the spectrum, it'll certainly
do some pumping and breathing if you want to take it
over the edge.
The
Brite/Warm switch that shunts one of the capacitors
in the output stage doesn't seem to have much effect
on the sound. Although, it sounded good on my breadboard,
I'm not sure why. I really like everything else about
this pedal a lot. So, for now, I'm not going to mess
with it.
This
circuit requires a bi-polar power supply. I wanted to
have a lot of headroom, so I went with +/-15V. The power
supply circuit I used is shown on the schematic. I use
a 18VDC wall wart to power it. If you build this power
supply, make sure to keep the power ground separate
from the circuit ground, and put the regulator on a
heatsink.
OK,
enough talk...






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