Bo Deadly
Well-known member
There are two major groups of Germanium transistors. There are ones that tend to be leaky and vary greatly with gain, and those that tend to be relatively low leakage and more stable gain numbers. I used to think that this was due to grown versus alloy junction fabrication differences but I now think the grown ones where never really used that much and that there was some other kind of improvement in the alloy junction process that made much more consistent and reliable parts. My feeling is that the first transistor in a conventional fuzz should be about 100uA leakage and gain 80. Most of the newer Germaniums have much lower leakage. So you want some leakage IMO.
However, I think you can use the leakier transistors. Even the 300uA if they're high gain. As demonstrated by CJ's fz-1 circuit, the leaky ones will self bias. This might be exploited as a feature and not a fault. You just have to design the circuit around individual transistors. You can use a 1M (or higher) bias resistor instead of the 100k in a typical fuzz-face. That could yield different sounds depending on how much the emitter resistor is bypassed.
Create a rig for testingleaky self-biasing transistors. Use a 1K current limiting collector resistor and two trimpots to trim out the collector and emitter resistances. Play with the trimpots to see what sort of bias you can get. Consider that if the emitter is fully bypassed you might not want exactly V/2. For best results, use a signal generator, attenuator and scope to see how it clips.
However, I think you can use the leakier transistors. Even the 300uA if they're high gain. As demonstrated by CJ's fz-1 circuit, the leaky ones will self bias. This might be exploited as a feature and not a fault. You just have to design the circuit around individual transistors. You can use a 1M (or higher) bias resistor instead of the 100k in a typical fuzz-face. That could yield different sounds depending on how much the emitter resistor is bypassed.
Create a rig for testing