Boss Tone reproduction
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One of the two BossTones I have would act as an 'octave divider' when its battery reaches a certain amount of discharge, giving the original note plus a note an octave lower -
This was great back then, in a time before Octave Dividers were on the market!
Trouble was, besides 'waiting out' a fresh battery, is that it produced the 'octave' effect only in the lower register of the (E9) tuning and not on the higher notes.
~Russ
This was great back then, in a time before Octave Dividers were on the market!
Trouble was, besides 'waiting out' a fresh battery, is that it produced the 'octave' effect only in the lower register of the (E9) tuning and not on the higher notes.
~Russ
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- Micky Byrne
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Hi Jerry, totally agree with you on the Boss tone. Had mine since 1970, never gone wrong, and got a spare one too just in case
As you say, it's all on there "IF" you need it, and technique and tone helps. I have a British made sustain unit like the famous "G" brand, so when I kick in on distortion, I back off the highs on the sustain unit. Works a treat. For the "Strings" simulation I do what most players do picking on strings 4,5 and 8 back off the highs and I kick in another Boss RV3 for more reverb. I just play what a string section will play. Makes the little Boss tone add to the versatility of a steel guitar in a small band. That's apart from my Leslie simulator 
Micky Byrne United Kingdom


Micky Byrne United Kingdom
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Thank you so much Keith, John was a really good laugh. We had fun times together, I always remember him playing "Lady Madonna" by the Beatles on his Gibson 335. Bass runs and all...all at the same time :)He got the gals too
lucky man
....must have been the mature grey hair
....by the way I engraved the pick guard on his 335. Hope he still has it. Of course I'll say hello from you...thanks soooooo much.
Micky Byrne United Kingdom www.mickybyrne.com



Micky Byrne United Kingdom www.mickybyrne.com
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- Bob Lawrence
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My version of the Bosstone
Keith,
Good luck with your project. I made this unit last summer and although I don't use fuzz much I had my friend Bob Mcdonald test it and he liked it better that the Boss tone he has. You can put the unit in or out of circuit with the palm of your hand as you play and the green LED lights when fuzz is in circuit. Big knobs are easy to turn with picks on.

Good luck with your project. I made this unit last summer and although I don't use fuzz much I had my friend Bob Mcdonald test it and he liked it better that the Boss tone he has. You can put the unit in or out of circuit with the palm of your hand as you play and the green LED lights when fuzz is in circuit. Big knobs are easy to turn with picks on.


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Picture of the Input Jack side
Bruce,
The switch is a push button DPDT / ON ON
Keith,
Thanks! for your comments. I was just testing a few different layout ideas and out of 3 designs, I liked this one the best. The case is a little bigger that the first one I used but it's more convenient for prototyping ideas.
The schematic I used is one that my dad (Fred) used to build his many years ago. I am not sure of the source but it does have a reference to Future Electronics, Montreal , Canada.
Caps: It uses two .05UF and one .02 UF
Pots are both 100K
Here's a picture of the input jack side: (screws are mounted from the inside)

I am going to St' Louis this Friday and hope to see you there.
The switch is a push button DPDT / ON ON
Keith,
Thanks! for your comments. I was just testing a few different layout ideas and out of 3 designs, I liked this one the best. The case is a little bigger that the first one I used but it's more convenient for prototyping ideas.
The schematic I used is one that my dad (Fred) used to build his many years ago. I am not sure of the source but it does have a reference to Future Electronics, Montreal , Canada.
Caps: It uses two .05UF and one .02 UF
Pots are both 100K
Here's a picture of the input jack side: (screws are mounted from the inside)

I am going to St' Louis this Friday and hope to see you there.

Franklin D10, Telonics (E9)True Tone(C6) pickups, Fender Steel King , Evans (FET 500LV), Nashville 400, Quilter MicroBlock 45 amp's, Telonics FP100 volume pedal, PodXT(effects only), Boss RV3(delay & reverb),Steel Guitar Black Box,Bill Lawrence cables, Walker Seat,Peterson Flip Tuner, IVL Steel Rider, IK Multimedia IRig Pro DUO for recording.
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During the time I was working the OPRY in the late 70's, Hal Rugg, Sonny Burnette and Weldon Myrick were pushing the Violin/string-effect on almost every song with the BOSS~TONE and besides strings 4,5 & 8 for the octave, their ‘usual’ strings of choice for the violin/string-effect were #1 plus #4-raised to F# on the (C)-pedal change, besides, I imagine; the #2-lowered plus the (A)-pedal raise on string #5. I understand, any means of getting two unison strings! _ _ _ The tip Sonny gave me to get the best distortion for the string-effect was to turn the Attack Full-CW and then back it off ever so slightly to remove the edge and then adjust the volume to match the uneffected volume! I think all of our BOSS~TONEs came from Shot's store. I remember Shot replaced something on the inside of mine and told me it would produce a better sound, and it did! Originally the distrotion was kinda weak!
<marquee> Go~Daddy~Go, (No), Go, It's your Break Time</marquee> L8R, jb
My T-10 Remington Steelmaster
My T-10 Remington Steelmaster
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I always had trouble working that little slide switch with fingerpicks on - not to mention I had a couple go intermittant on me so I did this mod.

I just fashioned a little piece of pickguard material to mount the new switch to and epoxied it in place. If I was doing a reproduction of a Bosstone I'd definately use a mini toggle switch - now that I've tried it. Ergonomically and reliability-wise,it's a real improvement. BTW that little piece of black electrical tape acts as a hood to keep from accidentally turning the pots once they're set which is real easy to do otherwise - another design flaw that could be improved on in my opinion. I still pull that little puppy out for rock & roll gigs or special efx. Nowadays other units may sound just as good or better but they're not as handy.

I just fashioned a little piece of pickguard material to mount the new switch to and epoxied it in place. If I was doing a reproduction of a Bosstone I'd definately use a mini toggle switch - now that I've tried it. Ergonomically and reliability-wise,it's a real improvement. BTW that little piece of black electrical tape acts as a hood to keep from accidentally turning the pots once they're set which is real easy to do otherwise - another design flaw that could be improved on in my opinion. I still pull that little puppy out for rock & roll gigs or special efx. Nowadays other units may sound just as good or better but they're not as handy.
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Can someone compare the bosstone to the old T.C. Electronics
I had a distortin unit years ago made by TC Electronics. I used it only for a line booster for years on my Banjo. When I started playing steel one day I plugged it in and used the distortion sound for the first time. Unfortunately it was stolen. I have never heard a unit I liked better. Is anyone familiar with the Bosstone compared to the T.C. Electronics unit?. If it has that kind of sound I'll certainly buy one. I swear you could play faded love on one string and you'd think you could hear the fiddle bow on the strings.