SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
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The DIY forum is for personal projects (things that are not for sale, not in production), info sharing, peer to peer assistance. No backdoor spamming (DIY posts that are actually advertisements for your business). No clones of in-production pedals. If you have concerns or questions, feel free to PM admin. Thanks so much!
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
We have progress progress progress progress.....


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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
Not so fast there Captain Happy...ibarakishi wrote:
Found a few bugs that need ironing out, so we'll have to cut some new boards. Sorta in the "minor major" category, but need to be addressed. In the meantime, I'm going to try to bodge this build into a proper working unit. It's been an interesting ride so far.
But...
It does work work work work work.

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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?

me excited trying to pass time while waiting after the news
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
Looks good! Just curious, What did you end up deciding on for handling the different voltages and what's your main supply voltage? I can see the stepdown transformer and a regulator. Are you using the transformer "backwards" to step it up for the B+ and the regulator for the heaters?
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http://www.TFRelectronics.com <project info
https://oshpark.com/profiles/TFRelectronics <oshpark shared boards
https://www.staticdisaster.com/ <my radio show
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
I'm using a toroidal transformer to step up from 12vac. 12vac is common to lots of our projects, so not unfamiliar to most, and cheap to buy (much cheaper than DC adapters). I'm getting between 140 and 150 vdc on B+ loaded, which is in the same wheelhouse as the original. The same 12vac gets flipped to DC for the filament heater, as well as 5vdc further downstream for the power to the chips.
We're just sorting out some assembly and layout issues right now, so it'll be a few more weeks before we can say "yay" or "nay" to the whole thing. Phil is in the process of tweaking the layout for new boards. What I have now does indeed work, but it's far from something that I would throw to the masses as is.
Not the cheapest build. The transfo alone goes for close to $30 (in my neck of the woods), and they don't give the echo and memory chips away either. But, considering the market price of an Echodrive... yeah, worth it!
We're just sorting out some assembly and layout issues right now, so it'll be a few more weeks before we can say "yay" or "nay" to the whole thing. Phil is in the process of tweaking the layout for new boards. What I have now does indeed work, but it's far from something that I would throw to the masses as is.
Not the cheapest build. The transfo alone goes for close to $30 (in my neck of the woods), and they don't give the echo and memory chips away either. But, considering the market price of an Echodrive... yeah, worth it!
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
So, an update...
The project slowed considerably, main due to the fact that your's truly goofed up on the schematic that I sent to Phil, and Phil basically translated my errors into reality (Oh the horror, the inhumanity!). After a couple of toasted resistors and two power supplies that Skylab'd, I finally spotted the error of my ways.
Also, the original transfo that I wanted to use was surpassing the output expectations, so I needed to downgrade to get the B+ voltage under control, lest I cook the power caps as well. Supply chain issues means that hunting down the transfos that I wanted to test with was.... an adventure. Anyway, after weeks of waiting I finally got them, and having butchered the validation board to correct the errors (thank you Dremel!), and the correct transformer hooked up, it lives...

B+ is sitting at around 185vdc, which only 20 higher than the original's spec. Right now, it's pretty noisy, but I'm attributing that to the fact that I've got long jumer wires with some 170vac running through them radiating everything audio around them. My hope is that with the transfo mounted to the board, with very short traces for the HV AC, and a ground plane, the noise should drop to a normal level. Still sticking with a 12VAC/800Ma power supply, which are cheap and plentiful.
With the drive full up, it has a great grit to it, and if you overdrive the amp as well, it's pretty blissful.
I managed to do a quick video of it in action. It's like waking up Frankenstein. Not pretty... but it's moving.
BTW... how the heck do we get the YT vids to embed into the post. Tried the youtube bookends, but no dice.
The project slowed considerably, main due to the fact that your's truly goofed up on the schematic that I sent to Phil, and Phil basically translated my errors into reality (Oh the horror, the inhumanity!). After a couple of toasted resistors and two power supplies that Skylab'd, I finally spotted the error of my ways.
Also, the original transfo that I wanted to use was surpassing the output expectations, so I needed to downgrade to get the B+ voltage under control, lest I cook the power caps as well. Supply chain issues means that hunting down the transfos that I wanted to test with was.... an adventure. Anyway, after weeks of waiting I finally got them, and having butchered the validation board to correct the errors (thank you Dremel!), and the correct transformer hooked up, it lives...

B+ is sitting at around 185vdc, which only 20 higher than the original's spec. Right now, it's pretty noisy, but I'm attributing that to the fact that I've got long jumer wires with some 170vac running through them radiating everything audio around them. My hope is that with the transfo mounted to the board, with very short traces for the HV AC, and a ground plane, the noise should drop to a normal level. Still sticking with a 12VAC/800Ma power supply, which are cheap and plentiful.
With the drive full up, it has a great grit to it, and if you overdrive the amp as well, it's pretty blissful.
I managed to do a quick video of it in action. It's like waking up Frankenstein. Not pretty... but it's moving.
BTW... how the heck do we get the YT vids to embed into the post. Tried the youtube bookends, but no dice.
Last edited by digi2t on Wed Dec 07, 2022 10:43 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
for youtube videos you just have to copy the whole url, not a shortened version of it, then put it in the youtube brackets with the 's' deleted from the 'https' part of it. if its a shortened url link, then it won't work.
really excited to hear actual irl sounds from the pedal now! what is the drive on it equivalent to sounding like in your opinion?
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
OK, tried the -s thing... all I'm getting now is a big empty space where the video should be. Maybe it's my browser. I'll keep working the issue.ibarakishi wrote:
for youtube videos you just have to copy the whole url, not a shortened version of it, then put it in the youtube brackets with the 's' deleted from the 'https' part of it. if its a shortened url link, then it won't work.
really excited to hear actual irl sounds from the pedal now! what is the drive on it equivalent to sounding like in your opinion?
The "drive" isn't like a full blown OD or anything. It's more like an organic grit, like something you would get from any tube drive. With the mix 50/50, it's more prominent in the echos, perhaps attempting to emulate worn tape. It's charming though. Mind you, I'm only playing through a little 15w SS practice amp, so I don't have the benefit of hearing it push some preamp tubes yet. Right now, it reminds me of my Faustone Klipper (Laney Klip preamp), with the gain set down low. Stays clean when you want clean, but a mild dirty sound when you dig in. EQ-wise, fairly balanced as well.
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
Got it. I'm on an old Win7 machine, and no more Flash for Chrome. Added Ruffle to Chrome, and the YT vids are now visible.
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
That right there is some bad-ass mad scientist shit.
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
Design issues have been addressed, and the new version soon to be sent to production.
Let's try this again.......
Let's try this again.......

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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
It might be interesting to adapt this design into a psuedo reverb/delay with pt2399s.
"To my lay mind, the lobster's behavior in the kettle appears to be the expression of a preference; and it may well be that an ability to form preferences is the decisive criterion for real suffering."
http://www.TFRelectronics.com <project info
https://oshpark.com/profiles/TFRelectronics <oshpark shared boards
https://www.staticdisaster.com/ <my radio show
http://www.TFRelectronics.com <project info
https://oshpark.com/profiles/TFRelectronics <oshpark shared boards
https://www.staticdisaster.com/ <my radio show
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Re: SIB Echodrive clone: has anyone ever made one?
Don't think it needs to be limited to that. One could stick anything between the two triodes.imJonWain wrote:It might be interesting to adapt this design into a psuedo reverb/delay with pt2399s.