Hi all,
I'm building a stand-alone harmonic vibrato (with no reverb) and thought I'd share some details. I haven't seen any projects like this but if there I'd love to hear about them.
For years I've been chasing the luscious Harmonic Vibrato in pedal form and found a couple excellent examples that I've enjoyed using. But, something was missing (or at least I thought there was room for improvement). Eventually I picked up a reverb + harmonic trem unit which sounds really good. Then, inspired by the many Revibe discussions here and elsewhere (and since I love my old Fender reverb tank) I embarked on a stand-alone harmonic vibrato build.
This build is based largely on Hoffman's layout but with many ideas from Sluckey's project (thank you!!). Since there is no reverb circuitry, I was able to fit everything into a regular Reverb unit chassis and adjusted the power supply voltages with larger dropping resistors. I just cut off the reverb part from the Hoffman turret board and mounted the filter caps at strategic points in the chassis. Along the way I encountered a design by Mrriggs on TDPRI with a switch to toggle between harmonic and bias trem modes so I incorporated that as well (as a push-pull DPST switch on the Level pot).
It worked at first power-up but had way too much gain, so I used a 12AY7 as the pre-amp tube, and made a couple of other tweaks. I have to thank all the contributors to all the Revibe discussions here... so much helpful information is a bounty when working on a project like this.
Here's the current build so far (I hope the original designers don't mind me copying/editing their schematics):



(The control panel is just a temporary paper printout for now.)
Overall, I'm still dialing in the sounds. It's remarkably quite... like VERY quiet with very little noise or hum, which I like a lot.
I welcome any comments or feedback on the design so far.
My current challenge:
So... one thing I'm interesting in improving is the overall dry guitar tone when tremolo is disabled. It's a little sharp in the high-mids and slightly mid-scooped, and not as natural sounding as I'd like in the mid-range. I realize that the overall dry guitar sound will be influenced by the LO/HI pass filters in the modulator when the vibrato is disabled, so I want to see if I can dial that in.
You'll notice I used the LO-PASS and HI-PASS filter design from the modulator in the 6G12-A 2.5-tube design (using the Concert schematic as a reference), and married that to the 2-tube design for the oscillator and phase-inverter... but I think that was a mistake and I didn't realize that the 250pF cap needs a 1MEG to ground to complete the HI-PASS filter... so that might be messing with the frequency response? Maybe the LO-pass side also needs a 1MEG to ground to operate normally? My next step will be to install a 1MEG resistor from each of the grids of V4 to ground.
Alternately, I could rebuild the LO/HI pass filters as per the Revibe design, but then I'd want to find another way to switch between harmonic/bias modes (I like that feature).
Any thoughts?
Thanks all!