Violin sound.

  • Thread starter Thread starter Retired
  • Start date Start date
Hi,

Many thanks Raymond for your kind thoughts. Yes indeed the BOSS could have been dead as supplied. It's a negative center pin type that's needed.

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It's negative center pin and the one I've bought.

I did try a 9V battery in fact tried two but thought both must be discharged; my DMM was down in the workshop and due to dire weather I didn't fancy venturing down but when I did I found both batteries reading 9V.

As your rightly say Raymond a simple diode possibly only costing less than 1p would protect against wrong polarity connection but in the BOSS manual it states protected. Companies buy diodes in very large quantities costing considerably less than 1p each.

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I might still have hundreds of these diodes; I used them a lot during my vintage radio restoration days. I also used Zener diodes for fixing voltages on power supplies such as this one I made; I made two indentical; one for me one for a friend and used Zener diodes together with a wafer swtich to supply 10V increments for powering old battery radios.

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I designed and made two of these including winding the transformers. HT 70V to 140V using a wafer switch and Zener diodes supplying 10V increments but also using solid state voltage regulators to supply 0V to 32V in both negative and positive it depended on what the valve grids needed.

I'm OK with the DITTO though and possibly it suits my needs better than the more complicated BOSS so I'm not too bothered; I don't like losing money but sometimes it happens and for the amount involved I won't lose sleep over it.

I wish the weather would improve but I can dream on; it's the wrong time of year with more bad months ahead.

Kind regards, Col.
 
On more thought, Colin.
Looking at photos of the RC2, I see the output socket is also labeled Power On.
So, it may only turn on if there is a cable plugged into the output socket.
I have some other pedal that works like that.
 
On more thought, Colin.
Looking at photos of the RC2, I see the output socket is also labeled Power On.
So, it may only turn on if there is a cable plugged into the output socket.
I have some other pedal that works like that.
I have a compressor pedal that turns on and off when there is a cable inserted.
 
A lot of old pedals that used only batteries would disconnect power when the cable was removed to save battery power. My old Vox wah is like that . A lot of the original pedals didn't have LEDs to indicate power, so unplugging was a sure sign that power was off.

My Boss Blues Driver and Tube Screamer and H2O chorus all light up if you don't have plugs inserted. I' would guess that the looper does the same but that "power on" comment certainly deserves investigating.
 
Colin, I checked the Boss manuals, and the output jack is indeed the power switch! It's the same for the RC1, RC2, RC3 and RC5.


Turning the Power On/Off

Turning On the Power
Insert the plug of the connection cable into the OUTPUT jack.
* This unit is equipped with a protection circuit. A brief interval (a few seconds) after power up is required before the
unit will operate normally.

Turning Off the Power
Remove the plug of the connection cable from the OUTPUT jack.



OUTPUT Jack
Connect a guitar amp or monitor speaker here.
* The OUTPUT jack also doubles as a power switch. Inserting a plug into the OUTPUT jack switches on the power; pull
out the plug to switch the power off.
To avoid unnecessary depletion of the battery, pull out the plug connected to the OUTPUT jack when
you’re not using the RC-2.
 
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