Joyo - JF-08 Digital Delay [gut shots]
- culturejam
- Old Solderhand
Information
Very nice. A 2399 + compander. Very boutique indeed.
- Seiche
- Old Solderhand
does the compander make it not have the oscillation, e.g. when you're turning the time knob, vs the deep blue delay?culturejam wrote:Very nice. A 2399 + compander. Very boutique indeed.
- culturejam
- Old Solderhand
Information
I have no idea if that is also an outcome. But the compander's main role is to reduce hiss/noise in the repeats.Seiche wrote:does the compander make it not have the oscillation, e.g. when you're turning the time knob, vs the deep blue delay?
- Seiche
- Old Solderhand
i was just wondering why the DBD has it, while the joyo doesn't in the videos.culturejam wrote:I have no idea if that is also an outcome. But the compander's main role is to reduce hiss/noise in the repeats.Seiche wrote:does the compander make it not have the oscillation, e.g. when you're turning the time knob, vs the deep blue delay?
- HEAD
- Resistor Ronker
Nope, that's more question about how the feedback pot is calculated. See some vids of the pt-80 and see how it oscillates.Seiche wrote:i was just wondering why the DBD has it, while the joyo doesn't in the videos.culturejam wrote:I have no idea if that is also an outcome. But the compander's main role is to reduce hiss/noise in the repeats.Seiche wrote:does the compander make it not have the oscillation, e.g. when you're turning the time knob, vs the deep blue delay?
- alexradium
- Resistor Ronker
i got one ,it seems a pt80 by ggg,i will take a look,nice cheap pedal.
- andregarcia57
- Cap Cooler
I've got a weird problem, I have several pedals all 3pdt, the guvnor is the one who is giving problem, when I connect it with the Joyo delay increases the volume of the delay, which can be?
Got one of these yesterday and am not entirely happy. There is a high end roll-off on the repeats that I just don't like. The voicing is not very nice. I know that many people like analog delays and that lo-fi sound but that is not what I want from a digital delay and I dont think I am getting that anyway. I want something a bit more pristine ... or even with a simple tone control to take the harsh edge off the repeats when needed. I am guessing that the roll-off is deliberate and and wondering if it can be removed or tuned.
Does this sound like a straightforward mod or should I just sell the pedal on?
Does this sound like a straightforward mod or should I just sell the pedal on?
- atreidesheir
- Diode Debunker
not something worth trying. It is designed from the ground up to sound like that. You just need a delay noted for clean delays.jimsreynolds wrote:Got one of these yesterday and am not entirely happy. There is a high end roll-off on the repeats that I just don't like. The voicing is not very nice. I know that many people like analog delays and that lo-fi sound but that is not what I want from a digital delay and I dont think I am getting that anyway. I want something a bit more pristine ... or even with a simple tone control to take the harsh edge off the repeats when needed. I am guessing that the roll-off is deliberate and and wondering if it can be removed or tuned.
Does this sound like a straightforward mod or should I just sell the pedal on?
Behringer Digital Delay and such and on up in price.
I know the new Chinese import pedals are counter-intuitive with their "digital delay" labeling. I have the biyang version and it sounds very analog.
I would sell the joyo for almost as much as you paid and I suggest you look at a Digitech Digidelay. It has pristine digital delays and 6 other delay voices. You can find them on ebay for @$50.
"Contemplate it - on the tree of woe." :Thulsa Doom
A well-made Filter Circuit makes it very similar to the sound of Analog Delayjimsreynolds wrote:Got one of these yesterday and am not entirely happy. There is a high end roll-off on the repeats that I just don't like. The voicing is not very nice. I know that many people like analog delays and that lo-fi sound but that is not what I want from a digital delay and I dont think I am getting that anyway. I want something a bit more pristine ... or even with a simple tone control to take the harsh edge off the repeats when needed. I am guessing that the roll-off is deliberate and and wondering if it can be removed or tuned.
Does this sound like a straightforward mod or should I just sell the pedal on?
- johnnyg
- Resistor Ronker
Bit late to the party, but just got one of these. Looking it over all component values I could read near enough match those in scott swartz's PT80 - it looks to be the same thing minus the charge pump, as alexradium & prob others have already said. (There are non polarised 2.2uf caps in place of most the 1uf caps in the pt80, trivial diff).
Quality of one I got is really remarkable.Very cleanly soldered. Puts a lot of expensive boutique pedals to shame.
Also appears to be proper 60/40 solder(!). Nice shiny joints. No grimy non leaded stuff.
Expect I got a bit lucky. This range of joyos look hand soldered & the individual who did mine I guess has taken care and is pretty meticulous/skilled.
Only thing to be careful of, saw no polarity protection diode.
Shld maybe be run on 12v psu, like pt80. Could go higher voltage I guess, but 571 abs max is 18v I think & could be asking too much of 5v regulator.
Cost me plenty less to buy this than to build a nice pt80!
Quality of one I got is really remarkable.Very cleanly soldered. Puts a lot of expensive boutique pedals to shame.
Also appears to be proper 60/40 solder(!). Nice shiny joints. No grimy non leaded stuff.
Expect I got a bit lucky. This range of joyos look hand soldered & the individual who did mine I guess has taken care and is pretty meticulous/skilled.
Only thing to be careful of, saw no polarity protection diode.
Shld maybe be run on 12v psu, like pt80. Could go higher voltage I guess, but 571 abs max is 18v I think & could be asking too much of 5v regulator.
Cost me plenty less to buy this than to build a nice pt80!
Yet to break through the Space Charge
- alexradium
- Resistor Ronker
i got this for 25€,with a busted bypass switch that was a nightmare to replace,i guess the solder was lead free.
Anyway i resold it for 40...
didn't like too much the modulating repeats,no digital at all...
Anyway i resold it for 40...
didn't like too much the modulating repeats,no digital at all...
- johnnyg
- Resistor Ronker
It helps to melt in fresh 60/40 solder to a joint first and then desolder with pump or braid... sure you know that already.
Yes, removing a switch directly soldered to a pcb is a tedious job (unless you have a rework station perhaps). Personally I would either try to destroy the dead switch somehow so that you're only desoldering individual pins. Or I would dispose of the little board along with the dead switch and wire up a new one traditional/diy style.
Soldering mechanical parts direct to pcb facilitates manufacture/building & solves prob of how to fix a board inside enclosure. But future maintenance or repair isn't considered... throw away culture or economics I guess.
Not sure what you mean by modulating repeats. There is no modulation/lfo here. Do you mean it's not pristine/digital enough sounding?
If you look up Scott Schwartz's notes, the PT80 was designed to try and sound like an analogue delay, the the Boss DM2 in particular. The filters try to emulate frequency response in the DM2 if I remember right.
A possible mod (purely theoretical) could be to adjust/remove the additional post delay filter that follows the output filter in the pt2399... you could maybe even add a bypass switch to add or remove it. But the filters were calculated to limit certain frequencies. I don't yet know enough to recalculate these and what you could aim for instead... that's electrical engineering I guess
Also there's the compander in this, like in the classic analogue delays.
Another joyo I have is clearly lead free solder and smeared in flux. The soldering and bent and burnt components is kind of what I expected for the price... i anticipated I'd clean it up and maybe replace some parts (no big deal). But the delay I got was a real surprise. Was nicely made to begin with. Bit of luck like I say
Yes, removing a switch directly soldered to a pcb is a tedious job (unless you have a rework station perhaps). Personally I would either try to destroy the dead switch somehow so that you're only desoldering individual pins. Or I would dispose of the little board along with the dead switch and wire up a new one traditional/diy style.
Soldering mechanical parts direct to pcb facilitates manufacture/building & solves prob of how to fix a board inside enclosure. But future maintenance or repair isn't considered... throw away culture or economics I guess.
Not sure what you mean by modulating repeats. There is no modulation/lfo here. Do you mean it's not pristine/digital enough sounding?
If you look up Scott Schwartz's notes, the PT80 was designed to try and sound like an analogue delay, the the Boss DM2 in particular. The filters try to emulate frequency response in the DM2 if I remember right.
A possible mod (purely theoretical) could be to adjust/remove the additional post delay filter that follows the output filter in the pt2399... you could maybe even add a bypass switch to add or remove it. But the filters were calculated to limit certain frequencies. I don't yet know enough to recalculate these and what you could aim for instead... that's electrical engineering I guess
Also there's the compander in this, like in the classic analogue delays.
Another joyo I have is clearly lead free solder and smeared in flux. The soldering and bent and burnt components is kind of what I expected for the price... i anticipated I'd clean it up and maybe replace some parts (no big deal). But the delay I got was a real surprise. Was nicely made to begin with. Bit of luck like I say
Yet to break through the Space Charge
does anybody know if it safe the Joyo Digital Delay on 12v?
i tried it for a couple of minutes and nothing bad happen'd, actually something very good happen'd - it sounded much better with 12v...
so those who know how to check that... pls... i really like it and don't want to damage it.
tahnks
joe
i tried it for a couple of minutes and nothing bad happen'd, actually something very good happen'd - it sounded much better with 12v...
so those who know how to check that... pls... i really like it and don't want to damage it.
tahnks
joe
- zedsnotdead
- Breadboard Brother
Could you please explain why they call this a "digital" delay?
What makes a digital delay different of analog delay? I mean, always thought a "digital" effect was something in the realms os a sound processor and such... this one's nothing like it.
What makes a digital delay different of analog delay? I mean, always thought a "digital" effect was something in the realms os a sound processor and such... this one's nothing like it.
- alexradium
- Resistor Ronker
in general there is a 5V regulator in this kind of effects,whatever you input,it always works on 5V,but the analog opamps work at a higher voltage,that means more headroom and sometimes the performance in terms of noise,dynamics and bandwidth can improve.joejoe wrote:does anybody know if it safe the Joyo Digital Delay on 12v?
i tried it for a couple of minutes and nothing bad happen'd, actually something very good happen'd - it sounded much better with 12v...
so those who know how to check that... pls... i really like it and don't want to damage it.
tahnks
joe
- alexradium
- Resistor Ronker
it is digital,because it utilizes a chip that converts analog signal to numbers,does its sampling work and then converts back from numbers to analog signal again.zedsnotdead wrote:Could you please explain why they call this a "digital" delay?
What makes a digital delay different of analog delay? I mean, always thought a "digital" effect was something in the realms os a sound processor and such... this one's nothing like it.
So,in this case its a pure analog direct signal mixed with digital processed delay signal.
Pure analog delays are all those that use BBD chips such MN3007,SAD1024 etc.