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10/4724, 08 Pm ‘Simple, Easy Param and Graphic Es, Pis Peaks and Noches
Simple, Easy Parametric and Graphic EQ's, Plus Peaks and Notches
Version 1.1 Copyright 1999 R.G. Keen All rights reserved. See httpu/iwww.geofex.com
NNotches and Peaks
(Moveabl
A Basic EQ Cireuit
{The Twin T Filter
Variable Q Bootstrapped Twin T
{Twin with Variable Frequency
‘Variable Frequency Parametric EQ Circuit
[A Simple Graphic EQ eed —T Filter
If you're into playing with tone controls and notch filters to see how they change the sound out of your effects, you will
undoubtedly have built several glops of R's, C's and pots, maybe some L's to make up the tone networks. While this is
fun, it's not very flexible. Sooner or later you might wonder if there is a more general solution to messing with tone
controls,
Good news, there is.
Everyone is familiar with the sound of a wah pedal. This is a resonant peak in the signal that can get moved around. Not
so familiar is a notch, or a sudden reduction in level at one frequency, Sometimes a notch can be very useful in getting a
specific sound.
Even better would be Peaks and Notches, High and Low "Q" or Resonance
if you could get either
a peak or a notch,
depending on how you
set the controls -
something like the
frequency response
diagram. The diagram
shows the possible
frequency responses of
avariable O
peakinotch filter
Low Peak
Ss
{ecowa neten
Relatve Response
High @ Notet
"Wait a minute!
What's Q?" I hear you
ask. The techie
explanation is that Q is 19 400-200 Ik 40K 100k
the energy stored Frequency, Hz
divided by the energy
dissipated per cycle in
a network. Let me
translate that into something more useful.
Copy 1900 8.0. Kesn Allright eborvod. Soo hi ivmngpefoxoon
A guitar string will vibrate a long time if plucked. The initial pluck that sets it into motion stores a chunk of energy in
the string that is saved by the interchange of motion for string stretch on every vibration. It dissipates very little of its
energy per cycle, so it stays in motion a long time - i's a high Q mechanical filter. If you put your finger on the string, it
stops ringing very quickly because your finger damps it, removing a lot of energy as the string moves. Your finger has
lowered the Q of the vibrating string, removing a lot of energy from it each vibration, so it stops vibrating quickly.
Qs also a measurement of bandwidth. Another engineer's measurement of Q is to divide the center frequency of the
filter's response by the difference between the frequencies where the response is 1/2 of the center response.
Qs kind of a measurement of resonance, then. A moderately resonant filter is like a wah pedal - There is a peak of
frequency response at the resonant frequency of the wah. To give you an idea about how Q relates to sound, most wahs
have a Q of about 2-10. Q is also related to selectivity. A high Q filter, ike a guitar string, vibrates primarily at one
frequency. As Q gets lower, the resonance gets wider in frequency.
A high Q notch is just like the reverse of a high Q peaking filter. A notch filter has a kind of a dead zone where there is,
very little or no response to signal - very much like a guitar string with a dead or muffled note on one fret. The higher
the Q of a notch filter, the more the response is cut at the notch frequency and the narrower the band of frequencies that
are cut. Low Q notches cut a broader band of frequencies by a lesser amount,
For our super-variable tone control, we'd like to not only have the peak/notch depth adjustable, we'd like to move it
around in frequency, like the sketch at the right shows,
gootex.comiAticle_Folders/EQsiparamet. him 1810714124, 6:05 PM ‘Simple, Easy Parametic and Graphic EQ's, Plus Peaks and Notches
Variable Frequency, Venable Q Peakotch Filter Action
ive Response
Fei
Here's a simple circuit
to start building our
tone control,
a0 100 204K 40K 00k
The cireuit is a Frequency, Hz
simplified version of a
hifi graphic EQ. There
Copy 1000 8.0. Kesn Allright eborvod. Soo hi ivmngpofoxcoon
are a number of series
L-C filters which are A Simple "Graphic" EQ
connected to the “te 28
wipers of a pot, one ln
per L-C filter. Itis a 5 out
characteristic of a im
series LC filter that it
has a high impedance —
except at its resonant
frequency. At that c c
frequency, the series ry tak
impedance drops to a wr — Rewtes
minimum, which is Tho Gormedions Wa
zero if the components : fo |] shazir
are perfect. The Tt I
resonant frequency Wearcasem £ ie
may be calculated as No connection
iis Vb wa
ECW copyright 1990 8.6. Hoon _Alighioreserved. Soo hi ivnigeefx.con
The pots are connected between the inverting and noninverting inputs of an opamp. The opamp also has input and
feedback resistors.
FrL/(2*pi*SQRT(L*C)).
Effectively, the wiper of each pot is grounded through the low impedance of the LC filter at that frequency. The pot
wiper may be dialed to the input side, in which case it shunts the input to ground, producing a notch in the frequency
response at its center frequency. It may also be dialed to the inverting input, which shunts the feedback to ground at its
resonant frequency, producing a peak when directly in the center, there is no effect from the LC filter at all - frequency
response is flat. In this position, the LC filter's effect is equal on both + and - inputs, so there is no overall effect.
If the LC filter has a non-zero resistance, it no longer looks like a short to ground at the center frequency, but a resistor.
This has the effect of making the frequency selectivity less radical - it sounds less resonant - the"Q" has been lowered.
From the schematic, you can see that the setup is pretty simple - a buffer opamp in front of things to make sure that
there's no loading on the source driving the circuit, and the output opamp, with the LC filters tied to the wipers of pots
strung acrosss the inputs of the opamp. By adjusting the series resistor in each LC filter section, we can make the filters
as narrow or wide as we like, and we can add as many filter sections as we like. Common numbers of frequency bands
in graphic EQ’s are 5, 7, 10, 20, up to 31. Ifthe Q's are chosen properly with relationship to the center frequency of the
LC filters, each filter is independent of the others,
But now we need to make the center frequencies variable. That's a bit harder. To change the resonant frequencies of the
LC networks, we have to change the values of the C's or L's, While there are variable capacitors and inductors, they are
butky and expensive, We need a way to make them small and cheap.
Here's one way to do that, There is a circuit trick that uses an amplifier, a couple of resistors and a capacitor to make a
network that looks like an inductor with one end grounded to the rest of the network.(These circuits are called gyrators
for those of you who want to dig deeper.)
If we substitute these simulated inductors for the real inductors, we get what acts like a variable inductor. For the first
simulated inductor shown, the inductance is equal to the value of C2 times the 470 ohm resistor times the series
resistance of the 51K and the setting of the IM pot. Or more prosaicly, Leff = R1*R2*C, where R1=470, R2= series
resistance, and C = C2's value.
gootex.comiAticle_Folders/EQsiparamet. him
206tore24, 505 pM ‘Sine, Ey Parametic and Graphic E's, Plus Pea and Noches
Doing a litte math, we Notchos, Peaks, and Q's - A Smple Parametric EQ
‘can come up with
some values of the
frequency range for an
LC section. The L 1M)
value is
uF =v
Lmin = 470*51K C2
and Lmax = 470 | re
1.0SM*C2, or
10K
Lmin/Lmax = ej ee
SIK/1.05M =0.048 or | To Cofedions va j 02
about a 20 to one ch, sox [) Larue 7
range. CL [jo
vies cass over i
The center frequency No Connection \
of an LC filter is Si siusiea’ 1H
Fo=Li(2*pi*L*C), so ieketer \ A
the range of min to Ps ath wh ae
‘max frequencies is
equal to the square root of the variability of the inductance, or about a 4.5:1 frequency range. The "Q" of the LC filter
section is limited by the equivalent series resistance of the simulated inductor. The 470 ohm resistor always appears to
be in series with the simulated inductance, so we can add external resistances to lower the Q. That is the function of the
“resonance” control. This pot allows you to lower the Q substantially. In fact, you may never need that much resistance,
so you may use a smaller pot as needed.
Some good places to set the frequency bands for these controls are from about 100 Hz.at a minimum up to several kHz.
We only get about a 4.5:1 range, so we can pick some values. If we use CI= 0.15uF and C2 = 0,02uF, we get a range of
about 100Hz to 450Hz (roughly - everything affects this, but it’s a variable, so the exact value doesn't matter as much).
Fora second section, we can use C3 = 0,022uF and C4 = 0.01uF to get a range from about 450Hz to about 2000Hz,
These two sections allow us to put either a resonant peak or a notch with a variable resonance from essentially flat up to
a fairly high Q at any frequency from 100 to 2kH1z. Obviously, we can add more sections. I picked a two-section filter
for this example so T could build it with only two dual opamps. A third dual opamp would add two more sections, and a
lot more flexibility
This is one of those widgets that is so flexible that it can be hard to work, and can easily have more knobs than you can
easily learn! You have three controls per section - frequency, boost/cut and resonance or "Q". On the other hand, you
can also make this baby jump through hoops. You have a flexibility and a directness of control that is simply
unavailable any other way.
Tl be expanding this article in the future with more mods and extensions to the basic circuit, You can already guess
some of them - if you've read the "Technology of Wah Pedals", you can readily recognize that each section of LC
filtering constitutes a resistor-to-ground wah circuit, but with the option to make it a notch as well. That means you can
apply all the tricks mentioned in the Wah Technology article to this one - replacing the resistor to ground with an
electronically or optically variable resistor to drive it from an envelope or LFO. The sections can be driven in concert or
in opposition (or randomly!) so there is a whole universe of effects that you can do with this basic circuit.
A simple graphic EQ
‘As I mentioned earlier, the parametric EQ is a more-general case of the graphic EQ. A graphic EQ is a set of fixed-
frequency, fixed-bandwidth’@ filters set up so their frequency ranges match tidily at their half-power points, so that
when they're all set to match, there are no "holes" or overlaps between the adjacent bands. A graphic EQ has only one
boost/eut pot for each frequency band, and these are usually set up as slider pots so that the position of the slider knob
provides a visual indication of the frequency response curve. The world is practically floating in semi-unused stereo
graphic EQ's that can be had for very little to no money, but there are alway some of you (us!) that will want to build
your own.
Here is a circuit diagram of a simple to build graphic EQ. Notice that the circuit is very repetitious. the frequency
selective elements are made of capacitors and "gyrators" that simulate the response of grounded inductors. These make
the circuit free of real inductors, and are simpler to tune if tuning is needed, With standard value components, the
frequency ranges come out a bit imperfect, but this is usually not noticeable in real situations.
I did a test PCB layout for this circuit, and another for a commercial single-chip graphics-EQ IC, the KA2223. Note that
these layouts are not tested yet; however, if there's enough interest, they may be made available at GEO. T did both
boards to exactly the same physical size, 3.2" by 1.95", just to see what the differences in "congestion" and density
were. Surprisingly, even though the single IC version does have far fewer parts on the board, the board size could not be
reduced a great deal over the size of the discrete version. This is a consequence of the fact that a lot of board area is
taken up by the wiring to get from the single IC out to the dispersed places the pins had to be connected to. In the
discrete version, the various components could be distributed out to where they were needed, cutting down on the
wiring congestion,
Some recent commentary from Ed Rembold, Mark Hammer, and others has suggested that the ideal EQ for guitar use
may be a hybrid of the graphic and parametric EQ's. Some players have contended that they need the greatest flexibility
and adjustability between 700Hz and 1500Hz, not simply a couple of fixed bands, while they would prefer to have the
gootex.comiAticle_Folders/EQsiparamet. him 36tora, 605 PM ‘Simpl, Easy Parametic and Graphic ECs, Plus Peaks and Notches
bands of a graphic EQ
A Simple, Easy Graphic Equalizer bunched up a bit below
these frequencies. Instead
of a 60/120/240/500 He
set of bands, perhaps only
two or three bands at 80-
= av
our 100/200/400 Hz would be
enough; a similar setup
above the 700-1500 Hz
™ range would allow
we adjusting treble. There is
still some work going on
Consonants ne Band in these areas.
Go Shye fe ST ee
fo Bde Ade Coane Tus A that’s necessary to do
Sk 3008) Ooneur this with the basic EQ
25k 90083 ort structure is to make
“ox rope 807 higher-than-normal-Q
(that is, narrower in
frequency) bands suited
to the guitar frequencies,
Sc rnamanereseunEiEROe and spot some parametric
EQ sections in the center
‘9 acaptton of ruttound athtp uanagd couk utr se
of the range.
Acommercial guitar graphic EQ I have has bands centered at 100/200/400/800/1600/3200/6400 Hz,
Other peaks and notches
‘You may not want to go the full way with building a parametric EQ, graphic EQ or hybrid, and may only want to add a
bit of response curve life to your tone. That's not too hard, either. The key to that is either an active or passive filter that
varies the response. There are LOTs of these, but there are a few that are very easy and simple as well as being broadly
applicable. The first is the "Twin T" notch filter. A basic twin T is shown in the next figure
_Eostanpod Twin T for High Q Tee Section shown in
ae basic Twin T, if you
a iy SFT iue ou ignote the opamps and
1M 100K re | ne ‘connect the center
junction of the
iM 2C/0.5R leg to ground.
The twin T is one of
the very few filters
made from only
Theo" orresonance ofa —-_‘Tesistors and
x4 Twin Tis about 0.3. thatis, capacitors that can
the notch vfuti is aout tite cause an infinitely
“tt ioe the centorfrequency. Geen notch or
ne Sootstapping the “ground: attenuation. That is, at
Sinscmo Pee en point can raise the "Q" to as the exact center of the
““ FNS Mletomuonsbe ko 30. frequency dip it causes
= ue " total attenuation of the
signal.
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only about 0.3. In bandwidth terms, the width between half power points is about three times the center frequency.
That's pretty wide for any tone shaping. To get more "Q” and a sharpet response, you can "bootstrap" the twin T with an
‘opamp, shown as UIb. Connecting the point that would otherwise be grounded to the output of a voltage follower
sharpens up the notch of a twin T a lot. You can easily get "Q's" of 50 with fast JFET opamps like the TLO7x series.
That's narrow enough to use in a PA system to simply notch out 60Hz hum, and in fact, that's how they are often used.
For tone shaping purposes, though, that's a little too sharp, just as the un-aided twin T is a little broad. Since the
bootstrapped T is something like the bootstrapping that is done to the capacitor in an inductor-style wah, it’s tempting to
think that we can just set the bootstrapping with a pot. In fact, that works.
‘We can simply put a volume pot on the output of opamp UIb, leaving it just functioning as a buffer to keep the T
unloaded, and use another opamp to drive the bootstrapping point of the T. This opamp is driven from the wiper of the
pot, however. You can see that if the pot is fully up, the T is getting full bootstrapping for a Q of 50 or so, and when the
pot is full down, the output of the second opamp is holding the bootstrapping point at ground, so the Q is the unaided
0.3. In between, you get all the other Q values!
We can set this thing to be about an octave wide (Q=1), a half octave (Q=2), or a single note (Q= about 10 or more).
gootex.comiAticle_Folders/EQsiparamet. him 4610714724, 6:05 PM Simple, Easy Parametric and Graphic EQ's, Plus Peaks and Notches
Bootstrapped Twin T with Variable Q
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Bootstrapped Twin 7 with Variable Q
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simultaneously, and get about a 10:1 frequen
That's nice, but what
about moving the
frequency around?
Right now, we can
only notch one place
No problem. The Twin
T can be varied in
frequency by adjusting
the components, There
are a couple of
gotcha's here to be
aware of, though. The
‘Twin Tis sensitive to
the balance of the
parts that make it up.
For deepest
attenuation, it really
requires that the parts
be in the ratios shown
- that is, two R's and.
one 0.5R, two C's and
‘one 2C. Any deviation
from these will mean
that the depth of the
notch will be less than
infinite, However, we
dont really need
infinity, a 20db notch
is a very effective tone
control
‘We can use a dual pot
and vary both R's
y range out of the T. We can also vary the 0.5R leg and get a much smaller
frequency range. Doing that within a bootstrapped Twin T setup makes for a frequency variable adjustable Q notch
filer
Twin T to Bridgod-T Notch Filters
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rite Foe
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frequency changing in very much the same way that the Twin T is.
goofex com/Aticle Folders EQsiparamet htm
You've probably seen
other RC filters used
for scoops and
notches. There are
several of these, but
‘one that comes up
pretty often is the
Bridged-T. This is a
very close relative to
the Twin T, as you can
ce from the sketch. If
you take a basic Twin
T and let the 0.5R leg
resistance go to
infinite resistance, and
then combine the two
series capacitors into
one cap of 1/2.C, you
ct the Bridges
This thing is amenable
to bootstrapping and
5610714124, 6:05 PM ‘Simple, Easy Parametic and Graphic EQ's, Plus Peaks and Notches
Ifyou let the 2C leg go to 0 capacitance, you can rearrange the Twin T into the “dual” of the first bridged T, and you get
the second version. Very similar results.
gootex.comiAticle_Folders/EQsiparamet. him 56