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Dallas Arbiter
“Fuzz Face”
Vintage Pedal
T
he Fuzz Face was first released by
small British manufacturer Arbiter
in 1966, using a very similar circuit to
the ‘tone bender’ products on the market at the time. Manufacturers such
as Vox and Sola Sound were already
offering near-identical products, as can
be seen by comparing Figs.1-3.
The Fuzz Face therefore owes its
popularity not to a novel design but
rather to its uptake by prominent musicians of the era. Pete Townshend (The
Who), Paul McCartney (The Beatles),
and Hendrix are all known users.
If you aren’t aware, distortion effects
are widely used by guitar players
(including bass guitar) to alter and
enrich their sounds.
They may be looking to create a
unique sound for themselves, create
different sounds from the same guitar in different sections of a piece, or
just ‘beef up’ their sound with some
extra harmonics.
Soon after the release of the Fuzz
Face, Arbiter was purchased by Dallas, who continued production as the
“Dallas Arbiter Fuzz Face”. In 1993,
American conglomerate Dunlop took
over manufacturing, offering versions
with either silicon or germanium transistors.
The input stage
All images have been reproduced with permission from Pre Rocked Pedals
(www.prerockedpedals.com).
The Fuzz Face has used many different transistors over the years. This
example employs NKT275s, but it
was not uncommon for early models
to use AC128s or SFT363Es, all PNP
germanium types. These substitutions
were likely made for part availability
reasons.
In the era, it was more common for
germanium transistors to be offered
in PNP, in contrast to modern silicon
transistors, which are more typically
NPN. Both types can be made with
both semiconductors, but NPN transistors require higher crystal purity and
can be trickier to dope correctly, so in
those early days, manufacturers preferred to stick with the easier-to-make
PNP types.
This circuit therefore has a positive
ground, with a negative Vcc from the
9V battery power source.
The guitar connects via a ¼-inch
(6.35mm) input TRS (tip, ring, sleeve)
jack. The signal is AC-coupled by the
2.2μF electrolytic capacitor before
being applied to the base of PNP
transistor Q1, which operates as a
common-
emitter voltage amplifier
Australia's electronics magazine
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Popularised by Jimi Hendrix, the Fuzz Face (from
1966) is considered by many the gold standard for
foot pedal distortion effects. While it is a simple
circuit, it is unusual by modern standards. The
topology offers an insight into the compromises
circuit designers had to make when working with
early semiconductors.
Vintage Electronics by Brandon Speedie
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Silicon Chip
with a 33kW collector load and no
degeneration resistor.
Many readers will note this is a poor
choice for an input stage; the common-
emitter configuration has a low input
impedance, which will strongly load
the relatively high output impedance
of guitar pickups. Oddly, the Fuzz Face
has gained a reputation for only sounding good when plugged directly into a
guitar, not after other signal processing that might present a lower output
impedance.
This goes against conventional wisdom but is likely due to the interaction between the Fuzz Face and the
guitar pickup resistance/reactance. As
is typical in audio electronics, the ear
is the litmus test.
The decision to omit an emitter
degeneration resistor is another ‘poor’
choice by modern standards. Adding
one would raise the low input impedance mentioned previously but, more
importantly, stabilise the stage against
gain variations due to manufacturing
differences and temperature changes,
among other things.
So why would the designer opt for
such a crude topology? To understand
this choice, we need to be aware of the
limitations of early transistors.
Germanium is directly under silicon in group IV of the periodic table
and therefore shares many of the same
properties (eg, both are semiconductors). However, as it is a larger atom,
its outer shell is further from the
nucleus and therefore not as tightly
bonded. Thus, its electrons tend to
break free more easily, increasing
conductivity.
Therefore, Germanium devices
have lower forward voltages but are
more ‘leaky’ than their modern silicon counterparts, meaning they are
more prone to conduction without
any base drive.
This leakiness was exacerbated by
manufacturing tolerances, which were
not as tight as we might expect with
a modern semiconductor fabricator.
Lower purity of the feed stock and
imperfections introduced in the manufacturing line contribute to additional
charge carriers in the germanium, also
increasing conductivity.
These impurities serve to lower the
effective gain of an amplifier built
around a germanium transistor. The
circuit designer is therefore compensating in this case, trying to maximise the available gain by omitting
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Fig.1: the Fuzz Face circuit is deceptively simple, using just two PNP
transistors (the types varied over the years of production) and a handful of
passives to create an effective and popular adjustable distortion pedal. The
distortion was created by a high gain combined with asymmetric limiting
and clipping. Power is switched on when an input plug is inserted.
Fig.2: the Vox Tone Bender circuit configuration is almost identical to the
Fuzz Face, although many of the component values are different, as are the
transistor types. Pressing S1 feeds the input signal straight to the output.
Fig.3: the SolaSound Tone Bender again uses a virtually identical circuit to
the Fuzz Face but with OC75 PNP germanium transistors this time. Some
later pedals used NPN silicon transistors in a similar circuit, but they are
not considered to sound as good.
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2024 95
the emitter degeneration resistor. This
compromise makes the Fuzz Face sensitive to temperature changes and transistor hfe variations, which can differ
significantly between devices.
The AC128 data sheet lists an
acceptable gain range of 55 to 175 for
a newly manufactured device, an enormous variation of more than three to
one. For this reason, Jimi Hendrix was
known to purchase 10 Fuzz Faces at
once and play each to determine the
best one or two from the batch.
He was experimentally determining
which products had good transistors,
with adequate gain and reasonable
matching between the pairs. Their
sound will also fluctuate due to ambient temperature changes – one of the
many difficulties sound engineers and
musicians faced back then.
The output stage
96
Silicon Chip
The transistors,
capacitors and
resistors were
mounted on a small
phenolic PCB. Much
of the assembly work
would have been in
wiring up the stomp
switch, sockets and
potentiometers.
The output signal of the first stage
feeds directly into the base of Q2,
another common-emitter amplifier,
except this time, a 1kW potentiometer
acts as the degeneration resistor. The
wiper of this pot connects to ground
via a 20μF bypass capacitor, which
provides a low-impedance path for
AC signals.
This potentiometer is therefore the
‘fuzz’ control. With the control set
at minimum, AC signals must pass
through the degeneration resistor, providing a lower gain and less distortion.
With the pot at the maximum setting,
AC signals are fully bypassed, so gain
and distortion are maximised.
Negative feedback is applied to
the input stage via the 100kW resistor, which also biases the DC operating point.
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The reader may note that this voltage will be quite low and won’t bias
Q1 fully into conduction. That is by
design. Negative-going peaks from the
guitar will be cut off earlier than their
positive-going counterparts, providing
an asymmetry to the distortion. This
gives a more progressive effect, a characteristic musicians enjoy.
The series combination of the 470W
and 8.2kW resistors forms the collector load. Two resistors are used here
to divide the output signal to obtain a
more appropriate signal level.
The output signal is AC-coupled
through the 10nF capacitor and
applied to a 500kW log taper volume
potentiometer, another voltage divider
to provide final control of the output
signal level.
Considered in its entirety, with the
fuzz control at maximum, the circuit
offers the highest gain configuration
possible from a two-transistor solution, aside from the modest effect of
the 100kW feedback resistor.
Why early germanium transistors were mostly PNP types
In the early days of semiconductor electronics, germanium was the material
of choice for manufacturing transistors, predating silicon. PNP types were
far more common among these early transistors than NPN types due to germanium’s inherent material properties and the era’s technological limitations.
As a semiconductor, germanium has a higher hole mobility than electron
mobility. That makes it easier to manufacture PNP transistors, where the current is primarily carried by holes moving from the p-type (positive) areas to the
n-type (negative) area. In contrast, NPN transistors rely on electron mobility,
which is less efficient in germanium.
The doping process involves adding impurities to a semiconductor material to change its electrical properties, with the type of impurity determining
whether the semiconductor becomes n-type or p-type.
The dopants used to create the p-type material in germanium transistors
were more readily available and easier to work with than those needed for
n-type material. Elements such as indium and gallium, used for p-type doping, could be more easily incorporated into germanium during manufacturing.
This was partly because the processes developed early on were optimised
for the materials and dopants that were most accessible and well-understood
at the time. Thus, in the early days, when manufacturing processes were less
refined, PNP transistors offered better performance and were easier to produce with the available technology.
Germanium transistors are more temperature-sensitive than their silicon
counterparts, influencing operational stability. By virtue of their construction
and the nature of germanium, PNP transistors had better temperature stability than NPN types in the early transistor designs. That made PNP germanium
transistors better for applications where thermal stability mattered.
Silicon, with its superior thermal stability, higher electron mobility, better
resistance to environmental degradation and much greater abundance, became
the preferred material for transistors. This shift was facilitated by improvements in manufacturing technologies that allowed for the efficient production
of high-performance NPN transistors in silicon.
Silicon transistor variants
More recently, Dunlop offered the
Fuzz Face with silicon transistors such
as the BC108 or BC109. These are NPN
devices, so the battery is swapped to
a more conventional negative ground
arrangement.
While these more modern transistors have much more stable gain, their
differing characteristics from germanium (mainly the higher Vbe of 0.7V
compared to 0.3V for germanium)
make for a fundamentally altered tone.
These variants are known for their
harsher and less progressive distortion
and are not held in very high regard.
A modern silicon version can be purchased for $200, much cheaper than
the $10,000 (yes, ten thousand) early
germanium versions fetch.
Of course, many readers of this magazine will be more than capable of
building one version for a fraction of
that. If you can find the right vintage
germanium transistors, you could easily make one with the ‘vintage sound’
for a small fraction of what a genuine
SC
early pedal costs!
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◀
The Fuzz Face case has an attractive
shape that betrays its origins in the
mid-1960s. Modern pedals generally
come in ‘wedge’ shaped cases;
this disc shape appears to be quite
ergonomic but would probably be
more expensive to manufacture.
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2024 97
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