I’m having a bit of difficulties wiring a stereo potentiometer, and the wiring seems do be very different. As of now my potentiometer makes some kind of crossfade with the channels, left goes back and forth between L and R, same with the right channnel, and this is happening when I twist the knob. I wired ground from potentiometer to the negative of the amplifier circuit board, perhaps that have something to do with it..?
exactly the same thing is happening to me. Did you find a solution? Me and my friend spent many hours figuring out what's wrong and didn't come up with anything. upd: it looks like I accidentally got myself a balance potentiometr....
@@andriiprudnikov6334 first off, they are VERY sensitive to heat, I’ve burnt probably 4-6 of them. And I got some to work, relatively good. There’s always a bunch of noise that I can’t get rid of. Sounds good without potentiometer, but I really like the function. I did see this dude on UA-cam who wired positive audio to right pin and negative to left, placed a capacitor between viper (middle pin) and base of the transistor. Haven’t tried it, but looks interesting
I’m having a bit of difficulties wiring a stereo potentiometer, and the wiring seems do be very different. As of now my potentiometer makes some kind of crossfade with the channels, left goes back and forth between L and R, same with the right channnel, and this is happening when I twist the knob. I wired ground from potentiometer to the negative of the amplifier circuit board, perhaps that have something to do with it..?
exactly the same thing is happening to me. Did you find a solution? Me and my friend spent many hours figuring out what's wrong and didn't come up with anything.
upd: it looks like I accidentally got myself a balance potentiometr....
@@andriiprudnikov6334 first off, they are VERY sensitive to heat, I’ve burnt probably 4-6 of them. And I got some to work, relatively good. There’s always a bunch of noise that I can’t get rid of. Sounds good without potentiometer, but I really like the function. I did see this dude on UA-cam who wired positive audio to right pin and negative to left, placed a capacitor between viper (middle pin) and base of the transistor. Haven’t tried it, but looks interesting