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Posted
k, everyone got started talking about LED's and crazy things to do with 'em, and it inspired me.

this would probably really freaking hard to do, then again, maybe not. but think of a mackie sound board. on the right side (or middle for big boards) they have all the group controls, master volume, etc, and the little LED strip for how many dB's you're pushing. maybe not in dB's, but have that same little LED meter happening on the guitar somewhere, the louder it is, the higher up the meter it goes. when natural gain starts to bite, have it go into the red, so it distorts, which is what happens on the mackies. overload = distortion.

OK, i did the research, and this is the component you need:

http://www.national.com/pf/LM/LM3915.html

im not an electronics whiz, so if someone could whip out a wiring diagram of how to set this up with a 9v battery, i would be much obliged. thanks for the idea StratDudeDan!

Posted

also, could i just wire this as a branch off of the output lead in my guitar? and what would i do if i need to increase the sensitivity of the device (if the guitar doesn't have strong enough output)

I appreciate all your help. thanks a lot guys!

Posted

http://img69.photobucket.com/albums/v210/ansil/bargraph.bmp

it won't let me post that type of file.. even though its from a remote server..

Posted

I might have missed something, but are you using a distortion unit in the guitar as well? If you're just going for it as a cool effect (which I agree, it would be sweet!!) there won't actually be any 'clipping' going on when it goes into the red...?

Or am I just missing something?

Either way, it WOULD look pretty damn awesome on certain types of guitars to see some LED Volume indicators right on the guitar. :D

Posted

yes it will work with passive pickups. the transistor is based around an lpb1 booster[linear primary booster] with the pot there being the drive pot to adjust the overall boost.. around 1.5 is unity.. so adjust so you get maximum sensitivity.

Posted

question:

would this work if one were to use different colored LED's, i.e. green for the bottom 5, yellow for 3, then the top two being red? this would just make it look like a "normal" dB meter.

would there be a need to put resistors on them? if so, ~ what impedance on what color.

if i did need resistors, would i need a power supply, then? or is this just one of those magical circuits i could never figure out in freshman electronics 2?

Posted
question:

would this work if one were to use different colored LED's, i.e. green for the bottom 5, yellow for 3, then the top two being red? this would just make it look like a "normal" dB meter.

would there be a need to put resistors on them? if so, ~ what impedance on what color.

if i did need resistors, would i need a power supply, then? or is this just one of those magical circuits i could never figure out in freshman electronics 2?

One pin changes the display from a bar graph to

a moving dot display. LED current drive is regulated and

programmable, eliminating the need for current limiting resistors.

taken from the datasheet of the lm3915

http://cache.national.com/ds/LM/LM3915.pdf

and yes you can use them although i would recomend keeping all leds the same size.. as the current is internally limited that will keep the leds looking aprodimately the same brightness

Posted

Hey, is there any particular way I should wire this to ensure that it doesn't disrupt the guitar's sound? Like, should the guitar output run through it, or should it be a separate branch of the output?

Also, if i add a 2PDT will I need to add any resistors to prevent popping? Could I just use a regular toggle switch instead?

Is there a way I can wire it so it doesn't effect the guitar's sound, and doesn't need shielding?? Thanks s lot!

Posted

Thanks.

Well,, I know the output has to run to the in of the unit, but i wasn't sure if the unit's out has to run to the phono jack. Of course this could very well sound completely stupid to someone who knows what they're doing. So anyway, any advice?

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