Make Your Own Tremolo Effects Pedal

 by spel3o
In this instructable I will show you how to make your own tremolo effects pedal. Really what the pedal is doing is switching the guitar's signal on and off sequentially, ( a DC-square wave generated from a 555 CMOS osclilator pulsates the power to a lm386 audio amplifier amplifying the signal from your guitar.) making that cool effect that we have heard in so many songs to date. For this project you should have a basic idea of soldering and circuits.
 
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Step 1: Materials


As far as tools go you will need:

1.) Soldering Iron

2.) Solder- Make sure that you have rosin core solder, acid core does not work on electronics.

3.) Multimeter (Optional, but very handy)
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Twenty dollars spent at your local Radioshack will get you all of the parts you need for the pedal:

1.) Resistors:     470ohms x 3 (Yellow-Violet-Brown)
                              4.7K x 1 (Yellow-Violet-Red)

2.) Potentiometers:   100K x 1 (the small type that solders onto the board)
                                       1M x1     (the big type that you attach the knob to)

3.) Integrated Circuits:  LM386 Audio Amplifier
                                          555 Timer

4.) Transistors:     PNP Transistor x 1

5.) Capacitors:      10uf Polarized x 2
                                 .1uf Ceramic x 1
                                 220uf Polarized x 1

6.) LEDs:      Green LED x1
                        Red LED x2
                                
7.) Connectors:       Female Guitar Jack x 2
                                   9v Battery Clip x 1

8.) PCB:                Any standard perfboard should do, I used one about the size of a credit card that I                                   bought at Radioshack.

1-40 of 74Next »
666sebas999 says: Jan 4, 2013. 9:56 PM
How do you control de Depth?
Eman34 says: Dec 16, 2012. 6:48 PM
Do you happen to know what type of transistor would work, by any chance?
Eman34 says: Dec 13, 2012. 8:43 PM
Hey there. I just made this pedal but it's making a thumping percussive sound that sounds in tune with the pulse rate. Is there anyway to fix this? What might I have done wrong?
spel3o (author) in reply to Eman34Dec 14, 2012. 12:21 PM
That sounds about right, unfortunately. This is a rough design which can be improved on to remove that signal. I'm guessing that a major improvement that can be made would be using a transistor to switch the signal coming out of the 386, instead of turning it on and off (this most likely causes the pop). I had the same problem with mine, it worked though.
IronWill says: Jul 2, 2012. 8:35 AM
Mixed Nuts!
Trike Lover says: Jun 15, 2012. 10:24 PM
One easy way to add an "automatic" power switch is to use a 1/4" jack on the input with an integral switched leg. Sometimes the only switched jacks available are 1/4" stereo jacks but it doesn't matter - just wire tip and sleeve for your guitar input.

The easiest way to add the power switch function is to insert the switched connection in the jack in the negative lead from your battery to the board. (assuming you're not using a wall wart). Then, when you plug in a guitar, the battery negative terminal is connected to the circuit and it powers up. Pull the input plug and it shuts the circuit power off. This isn't my idea - I've seen it documented in about 2 dozen stompbox schematics, but it's sure handy for saving batteries. I think it's also standard in Boss pedals, among others.
Trike Lover in reply to Trike LoverJun 15, 2012. 10:37 PM
I should add here that this is a separate power switch setup than a person would use if installing a power jack for a wall wart that switches between wall-wart power and battery power (wall wart plug in, battery disconnected. If I was including provision for dual power supplies, I'd still put an overall on/off switch in using the guitar input jack.
dmarinov says: Jun 3, 2012. 12:53 PM
What is the transistor ?
sardone777 says: May 3, 2012. 12:59 PM
Hey yall. Just made this pedal, but something must be weird, because I'm not getting any signal in from a guitar, but I am picking up Radio Frequencies... Any ideas?
mclean.joe in reply to sardone777May 15, 2012. 2:59 PM
Hey there! It's likely that you have the ground and signal from your guitar input reversed.
asfi235 says: May 8, 2012. 10:55 AM
No current limited resistors on the LEDs? I'm surprised they didn't turn into smoke-emitting diodes.....
DJsoundestroyer says: Mar 25, 2012. 9:43 AM
Hey, I want to make a LFO/ tremolo unit for a modular synthesizer, I was wondering if i could trouble you for a video or MP3 of this thing in action. also, do you know how i could have a different wave form for the lfo, such as a sine or sawtooth instead of a square wave? thanks!
spel3o (author) in reply to DJsoundestroyerMar 25, 2012. 11:06 AM
Since this project uses a 555 VCO to control it's output, it will always be using a square wave. To make a sine-wave generator it would require a lot more parts. And I have long since disassembled this project for parts for other projects, I don't think I can get a video up.
Harrymatic says: Dec 17, 2011. 12:44 PM
(removed by author or community request)
Baronrc in reply to HarrymaticJan 11, 2012. 8:16 AM
Hi, I love the flashing LED in sync with the 555, PLEASE PLEASE please.... tell me how? I am competent at soldering but my electronics theory knowledge is negligible.

Thanks person
spel3o (author) in reply to HarrymaticDec 17, 2011. 2:15 PM
I'm glad it turned out good :) That's a really nice pedal case, great job.
mdog93 says: Feb 15, 2011. 1:10 PM
so because this has the lm386 in it, presumably you don't need to plug it into an amplifier, just an external speaker?
jakebaldwin in reply to mdog93Dec 24, 2011. 11:17 AM
It depends on how much you'd like to amplify the signal.
mdog93 in reply to jakebaldwinDec 30, 2011. 6:03 AM
how loud would it be without an amp
spel3o (author) in reply to mdog93Dec 30, 2011. 8:41 AM
That depends on what speaker you use, and what gain you have the LM386 sent to.
mdog93 in reply to spel3oJan 1, 2012. 5:43 AM
Ok :P getting beyond my technical knowledge now, without some kind of formula. Thanks for your help. Just another one thing showing my inadequacy of these matters:

Does the LM386 N-1 not have a fixed internal gain, or are we talking about the input voltage that matters? Or referring to putting a variable resistor between pins 1 and 8?
jakebaldwin in reply to mdog93Jan 1, 2012. 4:27 PM
The LM386 has a fixed internal gain of 20, but putting a capacitor and variable resistor between pins 1 and 8 you can set the gain up to 200. The higher the gain, the louder the output. From there, you can use an external speaker, but if you want to reduce distortion, you should keep the gain low and use another amplifier.

spel30 brought up the type of speaker used, and he has a good point. I don't know very much about wattage or speakers, but I know that it at least takes more wattage to drive larger speakers.

Input voltage does matter, but AFAIK, the LM386 amplifies the signal regardless of how high or low it is. I could be wrong on that one.
mdog93 in reply to jakebaldwinJan 2, 2012. 9:50 AM
Yes I knew about the gain matter. Just slightly confusing because I used the Lm386 chip to make an amplifier, here it's being used and still needs an external amplifier. Or does it not need an amplifier but to get least distortion would be best to use an external amp too.
jakebaldwin in reply to mdog93Jan 2, 2012. 4:16 PM
You can use the LM386 as the only amplifier. Using another amp would only allow you to get louder without crazy distortion.
mdog93 in reply to jakebaldwinJan 3, 2012. 5:37 AM
yeah, understood.
vadbhoi says: Dec 27, 2011. 2:12 PM
Maybe a power disconnect upon removing input 'jack' would be cool? !
ski4jesus says: May 17, 2011. 7:15 AM
What did you use for power? did you use a 9v battery or a 9v wall wart?
jakebaldwin in reply to ski4jesusDec 24, 2011. 11:16 AM
To use a wall wart, you would need a voltage regulator in the circuit after the dc power jack. A wall wart, even when it says "9v," can supply even twice that in little spikes. You might want to google that, I don't know what the fluctuations are like exactly.
ski4jesus in reply to jakebaldwinDec 24, 2011. 12:54 PM
Yep. I have bad experience with that now(That comment being a while ago) haha Such as a whole homemade amplifier being fried.
mark8883 says: Dec 16, 2011. 12:54 AM
Hey, I am new to electronics. I went to buy capacitors to make this tremolo, but they come in different voltages (16v, 20v). How do you determine which voltage to select?
Harrymatic in reply to mark8883Dec 17, 2011. 1:01 PM
You need capacitors that are rated the same or higher in voltage than the power supply you will be using - in this case it is a 9V supply so you can use either of the caps you mentioned. It's a very good idea to leave a nice wide margin though, as caps do tend to explode if they get a supply voltage higher than their rating.
Velbright says: Jul 3, 2011. 5:57 AM
Hi, You don't need the 386, you could just put the NPN from the signal to earth, and then it will silence it when the NPN input is high. I think...?
spel3o (author) in reply to VelbrightJul 3, 2011. 8:23 PM
That would make a verrrry annoying pop sound with each high and low, probably even higher than the one that already exists.
ski4jesus says: Mar 28, 2011. 6:05 PM
This is Great!!! good job! ive been looking for something of this type for ages!!
spel3o (author) in reply to ski4jesusMar 29, 2011. 6:21 PM
Glad I could help :)
Teburon says: Jan 16, 2011. 11:57 PM
i don't see where to use the 4.7k resistor.
am i missing something?
shmelfhelp says: May 26, 2010. 2:53 AM
(removed by author or community request)
encon101 says: May 25, 2010. 5:13 PM
how come R2 doesn't use the 1st pin
oweng4000 says: Feb 3, 2010. 10:00 AM
Could I replace r3 with a potentiometer? what would this do?
spel3o (author) in reply to oweng4000Feb 3, 2010. 6:50 PM
Yes you could, r3 controls the length of each pulse, although the ohm rating on r3 in the schematic is most ideal for a tremelo.
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