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RJ Guitars

Joined: 14 Nov 2006 Posts: 1647 Location: White Rock, New Mexico
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Posted: Sun Apr 08, 2007 2:22 am Post subject: Feedback - try this at home? |
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Feedback without extreme volume - is it possible?
Has anyone tried this??
http://www.marksmart.net/gearhack/feedbackgen/feedbackgen.html
it seems like a clever yet simple idea. I love my Les Paul but it just doesn't want to feedback... is it possible that this just might bring her to life without the Marshall turned up to 11?
rj _________________ Good, Fast, or Cheap -- Pick two...
http://www.rjguitars.net |
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surfsup
Joined: 29 Nov 2010 Posts: 1445 Location: Chicagoland
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 12:08 pm Post subject: |
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| Four years later, I'm wondering if anyone tried this yet, as well? |
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LeftyStrat

Joined: 14 Jan 2005 Posts: 2373 Location: Seattle, WA
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 3:34 pm Post subject: |
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Glad you resurrected this. I hadn't seen it.
I've done the Fenandes-style as an experiment, but it was more for smooth sustain.
The clips in that link give some great organic feedback.
I think something like a tactile transducer might work even better:
http://www.parts-express.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?Partnumber=300-375 _________________ Oh my god, it has an unused triode. |
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Reeltarded

Joined: 14 Feb 2009 Posts: 4321 Location: GA USA
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 6:16 pm Post subject: |
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Yes I have played a couple different guitars with a driver attached to make your back hurt even more. I'd rather hurt my ears! _________________ Dimes and dollars aren't as far apart as they once were. |
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vibratoking
Joined: 10 Nov 2009 Posts: 1432 Location: Colorado Springs, CO
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 8:45 pm Post subject: |
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I am not sure about removing my neck pickup or clamping that big box to the end of my guitar.
That tactile thing looks interesting. I tried to find some real data for it, but haven't had any luck yet |
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LeftyStrat

Joined: 14 Jan 2005 Posts: 2373 Location: Seattle, WA
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RJ Guitars

Joined: 14 Nov 2006 Posts: 1647 Location: White Rock, New Mexico
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 9:30 pm Post subject: |
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I am greatly pleased to see life come out of this thread... it was interesting to me at the time but apparently that extra sustain isn't what everyone was needing when I made that original post.
I recall back in the late 70's bands like Linda Rhodstat's and England Dan & John Ford Coley were doing all these songs with guitars featuring long ringing sustain and I was mystified how they got that clean sounding sustain at the time. I built a couple sustain pedals, bought sustain pedals, put a brass nut on the guitar, etc.. but the sound was never there.
Eventually the physics of it all sank in that sustain is an interaction with the guitar, not just a modification of the signal after the fact.... four years later I still wish I had followed up on this. If anyone comes up with a good little driver circuit for it I would be very interested in giving this a shot. Looks like there are lots of drivers to use.
rj _________________ Good, Fast, or Cheap -- Pick two...
http://www.rjguitars.net |
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Zippy
Joined: 25 Apr 2006 Posts: 1447
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 9:50 pm Post subject: |
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| Ever hear of the Fernandes "Sustainer" (1980's)? As I recall, it was a Strat-a-like guitar with some built-in doohickey (did I spell that right?). |
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LeftyStrat

Joined: 14 Jan 2005 Posts: 2373 Location: Seattle, WA
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 9:57 pm Post subject: |
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Well it's sort of serendipitous that the thread got bumped a day after I saw the sale at parts express for the bass shakers. I originally investigated them for use as a reactive amp load that could be muted by not hard mounting it to anything, and while at it I looked at the broader category of "tactile transducers."
Then this thread revives and made me think of the full range tactile transducers.
I've alway been a fan of the eBow, as well as the amazing Moog guitar. I had followed the long thread on some board whose name escapes me now about building a home brew Fernandes-style driver. But it just had too many downsides for me. (The neck pickup on a strat is a little bit of heaven for me).
Seeing this thread is certainly enough motivation for giving it another go.
I had planned on making an order with parts express (once I can figure out which Neo 12 inch is best for guitar), so I certainly plan on having a few of those transducers thrown in. I may have an LM386 laying around, as well as one of the speakers the guy in the link used. So I may have something to report as soon as this weekend. _________________ Oh my god, it has an unused triode. |
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Reeltarded

Joined: 14 Feb 2009 Posts: 4321 Location: GA USA
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 10:50 pm Post subject: |
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You can bury a sustainiac into a strat without it showing.
The first person I ever heard of feeding his guitar a speaker was Frank Zappa. I use volume! You think a Firebird is neck heavy? You should try a guitar with 9#'s clamped to the headstock.
Ebow is the key to life, and sustainiacs are just polyphonic ebows.
Zappa also had HotDots installed in the neck, neck joint, and body of the Monterey fire victim.
Why do I know so much about Zappa? Dunno. I hate the noises. I like music!
I don't know much about dancing, that's why I sing this song. One of my
legs is shorter than the other and boffa my feets too long...
-dons me now my fire ap-parel falalalala la la la laaaaaaaaah...- _________________ Dimes and dollars aren't as far apart as they once were.
Last edited by Reeltarded on Fri Mar 23, 2012 10:59 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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LeftyStrat

Joined: 14 Jan 2005 Posts: 2373 Location: Seattle, WA
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 10:55 pm Post subject: |
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Those tactile's are an inch in diameter and weigh near nothing. If I can get feedback at lower volumes into any amp, I don't need to know what the magic is in Tony's #102.  _________________ Oh my god, it has an unused triode. |
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Reeltarded

Joined: 14 Feb 2009 Posts: 4321 Location: GA USA
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 11:17 pm Post subject: |
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Servo drive a semi-solid tele made of pawlonia. _________________ Dimes and dollars aren't as far apart as they once were. |
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fperron_kt88
Joined: 10 Oct 2007 Posts: 59 Location: Montreal
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Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2012 11:40 pm Post subject: |
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I experimented with a system similar to the sustainor around the summer of 2008. I used a dimarzio hotrail as an actuator. The pickup was rewired with thicker enameled wire (something like AWG 24-28, IIRC) and driven with an COTS 1W amp (probably using an LM386 of some sort, as previously suggested above). The modified pickup was installed in the neck cavity.
I found that it gave me the chord sustaining features I was looking for. I later played a moog guitar and I realized the stream of thought as already been explored by some other folks! It also came clear that the name of the game was to integrate the whole thing into a simple package, which was left for further experiments in my case...
I thought at first that the idea of using a mechanical coupling (as is described by the OP) was the way to go to closely mimick a real guitar listening to itself in the acoustic field of a raging marshall stack. But, I went with an eq and compression device instead using the magnetically coupled device. It needed some tweaking to get going, but it worked.
The tweaking was with the processing that you apply to the signal before you inject-it back into the string (either with mechanical or electrical/magnetic coupling). Delays, gain, eq, compression, clipping... It all adds up to a very complex feedback loop. Fun, fun, fun!
What I dig and find very clever with the OP experiment is the experimentation with flangers and other delay devices. Never thought of that!
It would have been interesting to put a dsp in that loop to try and figure out an eq/gain/phase/compression curve(s) that would bring each note close to saturation... trying to mimick what you guys really do with these dumble circuits to have all the notes of the neck transition into nice overtones... this very project might come back to life in the future... who knows!
Fun thread! _________________ ... |
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selloutrr

Joined: 14 Oct 2007 Posts: 3690 Location: Southern California
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Posted: Sat Mar 24, 2012 3:05 am Post subject: |
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is this similar to the feedback circuit used in the Fernandes guitar? It generates a tone of wide band feedback (but ramps up slowly and only generates a wide band feedback). If so I have to say... It was neat the first time and got old after the second or third flip of the switch. You can hear it all over the Velvet Revolver album, so no one else used it. _________________ My Daughter Build Stone Henge |
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LeftyStrat

Joined: 14 Jan 2005 Posts: 2373 Location: Seattle, WA
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Posted: Sat Mar 24, 2012 3:15 am Post subject: |
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| selloutrr wrote: | | is this similar to the feedback circuit used in the Fernandes guitar? It generates a tone of wide band feedback (but ramps up slowly and only generates a wide band feedback). If so I have to say... It was neat the first time and got old after the second or third flip of the switch. You can hear it all over the Velvet Revolver album, so no one else used it. |
The Fernandes is electromagnetic, basically using a pickup as a magnetic driver of the strings. The link in the OP is a mechanical solution equivalent to putting a speaker or mechanical vibrator on the guitar. Listen to the clips, especially the HappyBirthdayJimi clip. It sounds much more like acoustic Hendrix-at-Woodstock feedback than the Fernandes infinite sustain feedback.
The guy basically turned a small speaker into what is now more efficiently manufactured as a tactile transducer, coupled to the body of his guitar.
The solution linked to in the op is more about mimicking acoustic feedback at a lower volume than creating infinite sustain. _________________ Oh my god, it has an unused triode. |
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