Pedal repair

1
I have an OG Sovtek Big Muff with a busted footswitch that I'm finding impossible to get fixed. I had a guy who does some pretty neat custom builds take a whack at it, and he is throwing in the towel after a few months of trying to get a replacement switch or components to rebuild what's there. Does anybody have a recommend of a good pedal person? The wiring is all still intact, it's just the footswitch that is janked up and proving hard to work with.

Re: Pedal repair

4
brownreasontolive wrote: Fri Jul 08, 2022 12:58 pm Unfortunately I've only seen these repaired one way - stealing the switch from a green Small Stone.
sadface
Thinking it over, it would seem like there must be some "Non-Functional..." units from that era on E-Bay with a switch that worked.

Past that, accounting for that there is someone with some pedal know-how in the picture...

Is there a reason not to just rehouse it if it is otherwise in solid shape?

Re: Pedal repair

5
numberthirty wrote: Fri Jul 08, 2022 8:48 pm Is there a reason not to just rehouse it if it is otherwise in solid shape?
in my opinion there's no point to this. Its a vintage pedal that is worth ~$500, I wouldnt just scrap the housing to re-house it for use. There are plenty of other options that one could buy or have made that will sound identical, so i'd say that saving the functionality is not that important. Its more about saving the whole unit, in the most non-destructive way possible. I'd replace the switch with a more standard one, which would require use of a few washers to get it secure in the much larger hole of the mounting plate. I'd also save the original broken switch that way if it ever gets sold it comes with the original part. I'm sure one *could* re-use the original switch cap on a modern switch but it might be a lot of work to figure out.

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Re: Pedal repair

6
Yeah, for regular use I’d also think Tony’s rec is the best way to go.

If you’re wanting perfect preservation as close to the original, you are prolly gonna have to cannibalize another unit, that’s is likely the only way.

I have a functioning one like this, but I’ve never jived with the sound. It’s good for A super mushy distorted sound, but there’s no clarity to it at all. It just kind of turns everything into a mess. I think I just need some one to go through it and clean it up or something.

Re: Pedal repair

8
This popped up in an email I got yesterday and reminded me of this thread.
It's not a replacement but it could maybe come in handy?

I'm curious, what's special about this washer, is it just a snug fit for the switch? Or is it color/material?
Or is there nothing special about this washer?

Re: Pedal repair

9
There's nothing special about that washer, other than its size, i.e. the ratio of the outer diameter to the inner diameter is larger than a typical washer. You might refer to those as a "fender washer," not named after Leo, but because they are/were commonly used on car fenders.

They're useful if you happen to drill your switch hole too big when you're DIYing a pedal. Or for purely cosmetic reasons.

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