Is there something I don't know about old TI BC183L trannystors, auction of 20 sold for £210.
eBay auction: #314026002138
Or much better price from Langrex, 10 for £2.25. https://www.langrex.co.uk/products/bc183l-92-npn-transistor-x1opcs/
David
Every day an idiot wakes up, you only have to *find* him. These transistors are absolutely plain vanilla and can be replaced by a dozen of other types. What about a "blind" transistor degustation event ?
You only say that because you don't understand the subtly of tone the true artist can extract from a fuzzbox fitted with these extremely fine and rare TI BC183Ls.
Neither do I, but if I come across a bagful at a reasonable price, say 10p each, I'll certainly snap them up and try them on ebay.
The thing is... with tone modifier projects like fuzzboxes, sometimes the "secret sauce" actually is due to something about a specific part number from a specific brand.
Since many of these "vintage designs" were in fact the product of absolute amateur electronic hobbyists, and the "sound" is produced by abusing the transistor in some fashion... the problem here is
not how the transistor works when used as intended by the manufacturer... in that application,
almost any transistor of the correct junction type and species would work to some extent. But when you're deliberately overdriving or starving a transistor for current to make it distort, that's another ballgame entirely.
So these transistors might be used in a specific circuit that is considered a "classic" for the sound... and unless you have an original of that circuit to compare to, and all our modern tools at your disposal, you may very well play hell trying to reproduce the sound with a substitute part.
So
all the bits of the original recipe are sought out by people trying to recreate that
"classic sound"; whether or not a specific part makes a real difference. I mean, yeah, it does have to
in theory... germanium BJTs vs silicon... old low ESR caps vs modern high ESR electrolytics, carbon-composite resistors vs filar-cut metal oxide, even noise from the power supply must make
some difference.
The question is whether all of those differences added up can materially alter that "classic sound".Just like some people prefer the way certain choobs in a certain amplifier circuit color the sound it is reproducing. All the "wine snob" wankery and audiophool terminology aside... in
some cases it does make a difference that can be heard and measured. It's not a matter of how
precisely an amplifier reproduces the original signal... there's always
some distortion.
It's a matter of whether that type and quality of distortion is considered pleasing to the ear.Which, of course, is
highly subjective.
/Devil's Advocate Modemnem
we now return you to your regularly scheduled insanity.