Unlike most other areas of audio engineering, guitar amplification is NOT about sound reproduction - rather it is about sound production. The distinction is important; sound reproduction (as in monitoring and what was once called "Hi-Fi") is about generating a faithful acoustic representation of an electronic signal. Guitar amplification, in marked contrast, is part of the system creating the signal. The sound of the guitar amplifier is not (necessarily) at all neutral, introducing components of the overall sound that are important. Most important of these is the family of sounds when (particularly valve) amplifiers are pushed into overdrive, when the resulting distortion can have a pleasant, musical sound in the right context.
Recognition of this fact led to the production of effects pedals (like my old MXR, above) to create (or, at least, emulate) the sound without having to go to the inconvenience (and noise exposure) of over-driving an amplifier. It also led to the appearance of a whole lot of amplifier emulations, exemplified by those built into my new amplifier. Between these extremes of the early, simple distortion (or "fuzz") box and modern complex DSP emulations of classic amplifiers in overdrive there was a whole generation of more complicated distortion effects which I missed over the past few decades. I decided to "catch up" by making a clone of an Ibanez Tube Screamer - thus "Dolly" was born.
The Tube Screamer has three controls; "Drive", "Tone" and a final "Level" control, as seen on my cloned unit...
Where the Tube Screamer is distinguished from other distortion pedals (including, for example, my old MXR) is in partnering the diode clipping section with filtering circuits - including an adjustable shelving HF section, giving lift or cut to high frequency components both of the original signal and of the harmonics generated by the clipping. The tone section and other aspects of the circuit are seen "round the back"...
Here's the response of the device in "Bypass" mode (the original Tube Screamer has electronic "bypass" switching implemented by some n-channel FETS in a configuration I used before for the Tx audio mute of my Funster Plus rig) controlled by a push button (Dolly uses a 555 in a toggling bistable circuit, whereas the original uses a discrete flip-flop)...
With tone setting on "Max", the effect on the 2kHz sinewave is seen as a tendency toward a triangular wave...
...-.- de m0xpd
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