Help with Guitar Distortion Pedal Schematic

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The discussion centers on troubleshooting a guitar distortion pedal schematic, specifically regarding a potential short circuit involving a 220uF capacitor and diodes. The user confirms that the audio amplifier is functioning, but questions whether the current bypasses the diode section due to the circuit design. Clarifications reveal that a short circuit would only occur if the capacitor's negative terminal connected to ground, which is not the case. The conversation concludes with suggestions on including the diodes in the circuit to achieve the desired clipping effect, with expected output characteristics detailed. Overall, the thread emphasizes circuit design considerations for effective distortion in guitar pedals.
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Hey, I've been working on putting this schematic together (Not my design, got it off of instructibles.)

The-schematic.jpg


It's a distortion pedal for a guitar, at this point I have an amplified clean sound coming through, so I know the audio amp is working. My question is, since there's a short circuit following the 220uF capacitor, won't all of the current just bypass that section with the diodes? If so, would it be better to put that part in series with the capacitor and switch?

pinout for the op amp is here
http://www.hobby-hour.com/electronics/lm386-power-audio.php
 
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I don't see any short circuit there.
 
Between the 220uF capacitor and the dpdt switch. Isn't that a short? Or am I just a dumbass and forgetting something? Probably the later, heheh.
 
For there to be a short, the wire to the right of the 220 uF cap would have to connect to ground. This is not the case here, for either position of the dpdt switch.
 
Oh, a short when the switch is closed.
 
For there to be a short, the wire to the right of the 220 uF cap would have to connect to ground. This is not the case here, for either position of the dpdt switch.

I see, so for it to be a short, the diode section (where ground is) and the negative of the cap would have to be connected to the same thing.

Oh, a short when the switch is closed.

Yes, that's what my concern was since if it was a short, none of the signal from the guitar would be clipped.

Thank you for the help, guys.
 
You would have to include the diodes in the circuit like this:

[PLAIN]http://dl.dropbox.com/u/4222062/clipping%20amp.PNG

The output would be about 4 volts p-p and have more clipping on the positive half cycles than the negative half cycles for an input of more than 200 mV p-p assuming a gain of 20 from the 386.

You should see the LED flashing for high inputs.
 
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