The
Dirty Bird's roots are in the DIY stompbox community. Much
thanks goes
out to all the great folks at Aron's
Stompbox
Forum. In addition, Lastgasp
Art
Laboratories is also greatly thanked and very much
admired for the
very cool Rattle Crow,
which was the Dirty Bird's original initial inspiration.
With some
redesign, modifications, changed component values and a
few extra
switches and things, the Dirty Bird can produce an
extremely wide range
of sickening, stuttering, fuzzy, distorted, noises and
effects.
Schematic GIF
Layout GIF
The two switches for Q and Flutter could be 3-position
rotary switches,
but I used toggle switches instead, because I wanted to
fit everything
into a small 1590B enclosure. So, for the Flutter switch,
I used a
3-position (center-off) DPDT toggle switch, shown as sw3a
and sw3b in
the schematic. For the Q switch, I used a 3-position
(center-off) SPDT
toggle switch, shown as sw4.
For the Q switch, the resistor values shown in the
schematic will be
pretty good if a SP3T rotary switch is used. But, I used
different
values to get the same result with a 3-position toggle
switch. I put a
2M7 resistor on the center pole of a SPDT, and 1M5 and
560K resistors
on the outside throws. That way, with the switch in the
center
position, the resistance thru the switch is 2M7. And, when
it's in
either the fully up or fully down position, the value of
the resistors
in parallel will approximately add up to the other two
values shown in
the schematic.
Of course, one of the stompswitches is for bypass. The
other one is
called Chirp, and is shown in the schematic as the
momentary switch
(sw2) between the base and collector of the transistor.
Stepping on it
changes the character of the fuzz, making it less stuttery
with some
settings, and more piercing sounding with other settings.
A regular
on/off stompswitch, instead of a momentary one, would
probably be cool,
too.
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