What
it does and features it has:
Welcome to the rather wacky world of analog octave, Z.Vex style. The Jonny Octave!
This pedal will convert your guitar’s output signal to either one octave up or two
octaves up, but only under the right circumstances. This tutorial should help you
achieve the best octave sound.
First of all, it’s helpful to understand just how analog octave-up circuits work.
Nearly all of them operate on the same general principle, that of full-wave rectification.
What’s that? Well, it looks something like this:
Z. Vex starts with a very simplified wave representing your guitar’s string swinging
back and forth once. This is what the output of your guitar would look like with your NECK
pickup and a note struck near the 12th fret (where analog octave-up circuits get their
best sound):
Fig.1 Sine-like wave.
The Jonny Octave boosts that signal, runs it into a phase-splitter (you don’t need to
understand that part) and then puts it through a full-wave rectifier, something like a
ring-modulator, and sends the result through a transformer. That takes the lower half of
the wave and flips it up over the middle. Then it looks like this:
Fig.2 Full-wave rectified signal, one octave up.
Note how it got smaller. There’s a gain stage to boost it back up after that. Count how
many peaks and valleys it has now... the sine wave in figure 1 had only one peak and one
valley. In the same period of time, the new waveform (1 octave up) has two peaks and two
pointy-looking valleys, or two times the frequency. Does it sound clean? Not really, but
it isn’t fuzzy, it’s more like half smooth and half pointy, which sounds slightly jaggedy.
For the 2nd octave up, the Jonny Octave does it again!
Fig.3 Second time through a full-wave rectifier, resulting in two octaves up.
It got smaller again... once again, there’s a gain stage to boost it back up. Now it’s
really funny-looking, and it sounds pretty strange too, but if you count the peaks and
valleys, it’s got 4 of each, making it two octaves higher (4 times the original
frequency).
Some things you can do to help make the octaves stand out are:
- always use your neck pickup for notes near the 12th fret.
- experiment with your middle pickup or lead pickup for notes much higher than the
12th fret.
- try turning down your tone control to make the octave sound more prominent, if that
helps. Sometimes it does.
Your Jonny Octave comes with 4 trimmer controls inside that are arranged like this:
Fig.4 Jonny Octave guts.