What about a noisy chorus or flanger? Specifically a wind noise underneath the effect. Still trying to understand if it really is the caps or the chips as well... And in the case of the caps, can I replace the old electrolytic one for a non-polarized film cap?
Hi Kyle, you just have to look front to back and compare sides until you can determine where the component leads come through on the solder side. If you happen to also unsolder something else close, no big deal. The main thing when soldering on these boards, or any board really, is you want to make sure you don’t accidentally bridge two connections together that should not be connected so take note of what it looks like before you start working on it…perhaps even take a close-up picture of the area with your phone so you can compare once you complete your repairs. I’m sure you can do it, good luck!
Damn dude you should be touring the world shredding, what a player!!
Maybe in the next life! Thanks man 👍🏻
Thanks from 🇵🇭 Philippines just fix my boss bf2 MIJ. Changing the 2 capacitor only 👍🎸😁🥰🇵🇭
Nice video, now I want some broken pedals to play with. lol Thanks.
What about a noisy chorus or flanger? Specifically a wind noise underneath the effect.
Still trying to understand if it really is the caps or the chips as well...
And in the case of the caps, can I replace the old electrolytic one for a non-polarized film cap?
Perhaps one of the other filter caps. No, electrolytic will work best due to their filtering properties. Try caps first. They are easy and cheap.
@@commonsensesolutions6662 thanks a lot 🙂
Awesome video!!!!
Thanks! Hope it helped!
How can you tell where the leads are from the bottom of the circuit board?
Hi Kyle, you just have to look front to back and compare sides until you can determine where the component leads come through on the solder side. If you happen to also unsolder something else close, no big deal. The main thing when soldering on these boards, or any board really, is you want to make sure you don’t accidentally bridge two connections together that should not be connected so take note of what it looks like before you start working on it…perhaps even take a close-up picture of the area with your phone so you can compare once you complete your repairs. I’m sure you can do it, good luck!
Good vid but you would think a guy working on audio would record his audio at a good strong level. Excellent content though, really good!
Thanks man!!
Yes, just used an iPhone…