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Germanium Transistors in boost circuits - How do they sound?


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I'm ordering parts to build a few different boost pedals, and it calls for any NPN transistor. I'm going to socket all of boards so that I can change the transistors around, and I'm ordering a bunch of normal silicon transistors to find what I like best. I also can order a Germanium transistor to try as well, but they're quite a bit more than the silicon transistors and I want to be sure it will at least sound decent.

 

The germanium transistor I'm looking at is a AC187, and it would be going into the DIYStompboxes beginner NPN boost project.

 

Will it sound good, or would I be throwing away $5 getting the Germanium transistor?

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I've only compared them in treble boosters and fuzzes - never a clean boost, so take my view with a grain of salt . . . germanium is warmer, less of an edge to the sound - silicon definitely can get ice-picky. I was a little surprised by how much difference there was in the circuits I tried (I've become something of a "tone" skeptic after dong some A/B tests on the "magical" 4338 chip in a tubescreamer). Definitely not a subtle difference, so I think it's worth the $5 to make the comparison. Although you should make sure the circuits are truly interchangeable. From what I recall, germanium transistors require a bit more care and feeding to bias them correctly.

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I have no idea - you should ask in the DIYS forum. Back when I was building stuff, I asked all sorts of questions there and got a ton of great answers/information everytime - very cool people there. (Not that people here aren't cool - just more likely someone over there will have tried it and can tell you for sure whether it will work).

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I've always wondered what NPN stands for....

 

 

NPN refers to the kind of gate in the transistor - N is one kind of material, P is another. You can have an NPN or a PNP - the letters in the middle refers to the polarity of the gate material. (N = negative, P = positive, meaning how they are doped to be postively or negatively biased . . . something like that). It governs how you hook them up to power.

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If you're referring to the diystompboxes beginner project, you'll most probably have biasing problems if replacing the Si transistor with a Ge one.

On the schematic there's a 10k resistor connected to the transistor's collector -- this is for biasing.

 

Replacing that with a 20k or 50k trimpot and you should be fine. Play through the effect and turn the trim pot until it sounds right. (or use a mulimeter to bias to 4.5v at the collector and adjust from there)

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