Tri Boost

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The BYOC Tri-Boost was a pedal designed by BYOC in order to make the "boost" of your choice available to you when playing guitar, bass, or some other instrument. It's characterized by a simple design philosophy and is limited to two knobs and a single tone-selector switch.

Unlike our Double SHO Crackle Boost pedals which consist of two boosts stacked on top of one another in series, the Tri-Boost isn't three boosts stacked in series. It is a single boost pedal with three contrasting types of transistors. Depending on the transistor selected, you'll get a different boost characteristic.

Unfortunately, the BYOC Tri-Boost is no longer being made.

Controls

  • Knob 1 - Level: Controls amount of gain going into and coming out of selected boost transistor. Turn the knob clockwise for louder and "gainier" output.
  • Knob 2 - (Rotary Switch): Selects boost to be effected from one of three transistors:
    • "Clean" Boost (BS170 mosfet transistor): This boost should result in a "smooth" and relatively clean gain increase.
    • "Linear" Boost (2N5089 silicon transistor): This boost should resemble an Electro-Harmonix LPB-1.
    • "Germanium" Boost (OC-75 germanium transistor): A boost like the old Dallas-Arbiter RangeMaster. Gain boost described as "spongy" and "warm".
  • Switch 1 - Gain Character: Three-way switch for tone-shaping of gain increase:
    • Left Full Boost: Increases gain across all of the tonal spectrum of the signal.
    • Middle Treble Boost: Increases gain in the signal's high frequencies.
    • Right Middle Boost: Increases gain in the signal's midrange frequencies.
  • Footswitch 1 - On/Off: Toggles the pedal between "On" (active), and "Off" (bypassed).

Bypass: True

Like all BYOC pedals, the Tri-Boost has been designed to be True Bypass.

General Information

One thing that's interesting to notice is that the mosfet portion of the Tri-Boost pedal contains the same transistor as our Jeds Peds Double SHO Crackle Boost, however, the Tri-Boost isn't a "double-boost" pedal. If you like the mosfet clean boost function from the Tri-Boost, but are looking for a good bit more "Oomph", consider the Double SHO Crackle Boost. The Double SHO Crackle Boost has two BS170 transistors, one feeding into another, and will definitely have a much higher level of gain available.

The BYOC team designed into the Tri-Boost a trimpot on the mosfet "clean" boost portion of the circuit. And, yes of course, we've already adjusted this control for the optimal point of the mosfet to be mostly clean across the entirety of the output. At the highest levels of boost, there will be some grit, but for most of the sweep, you'll get a clean volume increase.

Phase Inversion: Yes

Like most Boost pedals, and regardless of the boost mode selected (clean, linear, germanium), because each path through the pedal only involves a single transistor amplification stage, the Tri-Boost will invert the phase of any signal going into, and therefore coming out of it.

Clean (Mosfet) Boost
Schematic ID Electronic Part Action Phase State
Q1 BS170 Inverts Inverted
Linear (Silicon) Boost
Schematic ID Electronic Part Action Phase State
Q2 2N5089 Inverts Inverted
Rangey (Germanium) Boost
Schematic ID Electronic Part Action Phase State
Q3 OC-75 Inverts Inverted

Pedal Manual

As of this time, BYOC has not issued a separate manual on how to use the pedal. The best references are either this wiki page, or the build instruction manual (linked just below *and* also available...) at Buildyourownclone.com which describes the architecture of, and how to build the pedal.

Schematic

Please note that the original Tri-Boost calls for a 2N5088 silicon transistor. We have instead opted for the 2N5089 transistor, which has both a higher gain AND a quieter noise floor. This change can lead to a set of slightly different gain characteristics when linear boost mode is selected, but shouldn't be radical enough to be noticed in a band rehearsal or performance situation. Please note that from our perspective of pedal performance, the 2N5089 was chosen first for the quieter noise floor, then secondarily for the increase in gain; not vice-versa.

© Copyright 2007, BYOC LLC.

Artists

We are currently unaware of any artists actively using the pedal now, or who have in the past.


Additional Sources