Lich King Chorus PDF

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Lich King Chorus

Design By Erik Vincent

Crisp, clear, unmistakable, chorus modulation; the Lich King Chorus is a total redesign of the Zombie chorus with a some
modification goodness thrown in, and, in our opinion, is the best version currently available.

There are many Zombie Chorus layouts out there, but from our testing they all suffer from one distinct affliction: Clock
tick. The Lich King Chorus has been designed with certain mitigation techniques to eliminate the clock ticking issues
completely.

The Lich King accepts a range of bbds and clocks: MN3007 and MN3207 (depending on jumper settings). To curtail the
current supply problem (fake chip) prevalence of these 2 bbds, we recommend a cool audio v3207, it is in production
and sounds fantastic in the Lich King.

This pedal uses 2 standard pot controls, Rate and Depth, as well as two switches to change the sound of a 512 stage
chorus (BOSS CE-1) or of a 1024 stage chorus (Small Clone) as well as a vibrato/chorus mode. There is also a trim pot
that needs set to make this circuit to work to set the bias.

This effect is made to fit into a 1590B

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Bill of Materials, Stock Lich King Chorus
Capacitor Resistor
C1 1nF (film) R1 10M
C2 1nF (film) R2 10M
C3 220pF (ceramic) R3 100K
C4 2.2nF (film) R4 1k
C5 1μF (Electrolytic) R5 10K
C6 100μF (Electrolytic) R6 47K
C7 220μF (Electrolytic) R7 47K
C8 10nF (film) R8 47K
C9 1nF (film) R9 47K
C10 1nF (film) R10 10K
C11 47μF (Electrolytic) R11 100K
R12 4.7K
Diode R13 4.7K
D1 11V Zener (1N5241B, 1N4741A) R14 100K
R15 47K
ICs R16 4.7K
U1 TL062 R17 4.7M
U2 MN3007, MN3207, or V3207 R18 68K
U3 CD4046 R19 100K
U4 TL062 R20 33

Switches Potentiometer
Stage SPDT Rate 100kb (16mm)
Vibrato SPDT Depth 100kb (16mm)
VR3 10K Trim Pot (CT6EP103)

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PCB Spacing
The Lich King Chorus PCB is spaced for 125B sized enclosures

Pot Spacing
The Lich King Chorus PCB mounted potentiometers are spaced for Alpha 16mm potentiometers.

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Setting up the bias

Bias, VR3
To setup the VR3 trim pot for biasing, start by setting the pot in the middle. Next, measure with a voltmeter the voltage
coming out of C11. Next, set the trim pot to give C11 a voltage reading close to 4.5V. This should help eliminate some of
the ticking issues reported by others using the 4046 clock. You can check by playing the effect with both rate and depth
to max, set in standard more and placed on chorus (instead of vibrato). Notice that if the trim pot is too much in either
direction, the “effect” becomes much less pronounced.

Setting up the BBD

MN3007 vs MN3207 (or XX3207)


For the BBD chip, U2 can be either an MN3007 or clone, or an MN3207 or clone. To set to 3007 mode, make sure holes 1
and 2 are shunted on JP1 and JP2. To set to 3207 mode, make sure holes 2 and 3 are shunted on JP1 and JP2. This way
the correct polarity is being applied to the VGG, GND, and VCC pins, as well as outputs being either properly pulled up or
pulled down with resistors.

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Lich King Chorus Circuit Analysis for modifying purposes.
1. The Chorus Effect
The chorus is a delay based effect: the resulting sound is a mix of the original input signal and the incoming audio run
through a BBD delay time device:

Before and after the BBD delay action, there are some stages needed to avoid signal degradation: Pre/De-Emphasis and
Anti-Aliasing/Reconstruction filters.

The amount of delay to be applied is modulated by an LFO (Low-Frequency Oscillator). The usual delay times are around
5 to 50ms and LFO oscillating frequencies are up to 20Hz.

The most used LFO waveforms are sine and triangle:

The sine waveform produces a very smooth sound as the pitch is constantly changing.

The triangle LFO only produces two pitches and the change between the pitches is sudden. This chorus uses triangle LFO
waveforms.

The common controls in chorus pedals are:

Modulation Rate/Speed/Period: Adjusts the LFO frequency in the hertz region (range of the natural human vibrato).

Delay: Adjusts the amount of delay to be applied to the modulated signal.

Depth/Modulation Range: Adjusts the amount of modulation to be applied to the delay time.

Mix: Adjusts the blend between the original dry and modulated wet signals.

Vibrato Option: In this mode, only the dry signal is eliminated, keeping only at the output the wet modulated signal.

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2. Lich King Chorus Circuit.
The Lich King Chorus schematic can be broken down into some simpler blocks: Power Supply, Input Buffer, LFO, PLL
Clock Driver, Sallen-Key Filter, Output Buffer and Bucket Brigade Device Stage.

The circuit is designed around the MN3007 or MN3207 1024 stage BBD (U2) and the CD4046 PLL clock driver (U3). The
input and output circuits use the dual op-amp TL062 IC, while the LFO is implemented with the help of an additional
TL062LP op-amp.
The effect response is commanded using two controls:

The Rate knob adjusts the frequency of the LFO generator, adjusting the vibrato pitch.

The Depth potentiometer sets the amplitude of the LFO triangular signal, which is related to the amount of modulation.

The input impedance on the Lich King Chorus is close to 5 MΩ, allowing the pedal to not overload the pickups on the
guitar.

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3. Power Supply.
The Power Supply Stage provides the electrical power and bias voltage to all the circuitry, the whole power consumption
is low and estimated around 16mA:

- The diode D1 protects the pedal against adapter reverse polarity connections.

- The resistor voltage divider composed by R12, R13, and VR3), generates 4.5V to be used as a bias voltage in some
stages. The resistors junction (+4.5V) is decoupled to ground with a large value electrolytic capacitor C11 47uF. The VR3
potentiometer is able to finely trim the 4.5 voltage: sometimes due to the loading of all stages, the 4.5 voltage might
suffer some offset, the BBDs are sensitive to the bias, and adjusting VR3 will bring maximum clean headroom.

- The circuit formed by C6, R20 and C7 is a Pi CRC second order low pass filter, with an attenuation roll-off of –40
dB/decade over the cut-off frequency (22Hz). The 9V regulated line will bring the supply for the Bucket Brigade Stage,
rejecting high-frequency harmonics which are especially harmful in BBDs signal processing due to the clocking noise of
the CD4046 PLL clock driver.

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4. Input Buffer.
The task of the Input Stage Buffer is to create a high input impedance so as to preserve signal integrity and avoid high-
frequency signal loss. It is implemented with a non-inverting op amp with a voltage gain of 1.47

The TL062 op amp is a low power op amp that generates little electrical noise making it suitable for audio applications.

The 10MΩ R1 resistor from the input to ground is an anti-pop resistor, it will avoid abrupt pop sounds when the effect is
engaged.

The 1nF C1 input capacitor blocks DC and provides simple high pass filtering. C1 and R2 create a high pass filter.
fc =1 / (2πRC)

Low fc = 1 / (2π⋅R2⋅C1)
Low fc = 1 / (2π⋅10M⋅1nF)
Low fc = 1 / (2π⋅10,000,000⋅ 0.000000001)
Low fc = 16Hz
With a cut of 16Hz it will block DC and any low-frequency parasitic oscillation.

The (pin 3 +) input of the op-amp is biased to +4.5V using the R2 resistor (10MΩ), keeping the virtual ground at +4.5V
and being able to amplify bipolar guitar input signals.

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4.1 Input Impedance.
The input impedance is defined by the formula:
Zin = R1 Parallel to R2 Parallel to Zin2TL062 op-amp
If you look up the datasheet for the TL062, under the electrical characteristics, the input resistance is 1012.

Zin = 1 / (1 / 10M + 1 / 10M + 1 / 1T)


Zin = 1 / (1 / 10,000,000 + 1 / 10,000,000 + 1 / 1,000,000,000,000)
Zin = 1 / (0.0000001 + 0.0000001 + 0.000000000001)
Zin = 1 / 0.000000200001
Zin = 4,999,975Ω
Therefore, the Lich King Chorus input resistance is 5M, which is pretty good.

4.2 Input Boosting.


The input of the U1A is being boosted as a non-inverting op-amp. By decreasing the value of R4, so can soften the boost
signal coming into the circuit. This may be necessary depending on how hot the guitar’s pickups are. On single-coil
pickups, leaving R4 as 47K will be fine, but on a hot pick-up like a Seymour Duncan Invader humbucker, or an EMG 81,
R4 may need to be dropped to 4.7K or less. If distortion occurs, lower R4.

Also, changing the op-amp to a more tame response one, such as the TL022 or an NE5532 may also alleviate some of the
overloading to the BBD portion of the circuit.

Lastly, accurately biasing the trim-pot is very important. Simply turning it and playing it by ear may not be enough, as
close to bias will give you decent sounds, but it could still be off enough than when playing through hot pickups, it will
clip/distort.

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5. The Bucket Brigade Device Stage.
The BBD is the core of the circuit: the MN3007 which is well known for its fine audio response is used together with a
clock signal generator MN3101. At the same time, a Low-Frequency Oscillator (LFO) is needed to drive the MN3101 in
order to generate the variable delay time which is the gist of the chorus effect. In this circuit, however, we can also
utilize the MN3207, the NMos version of the MN3007’s PMos technology. This can be toggled between with jumpers JP1
and JP2. The MN3007 is no longer in production and is hard to find, while a few niche manufactures are still making
MN3207 clones. Typically, if switching to the MN3207, a MN3102 clock driver is required, which are also hard to find and
a little expensive. Instead, we will use a CD4046 Phase-Locked Loop IC. It too requires a Low-Frequency Oscillator (LFO)
to drive itself in order to generate the variable delay time for the chorus effect.

MN3007: is a 1024 stages BBD by Matsushita/Panasonic which provides a signal delay from 5.12ms to 51.2ms. To create
the chorus effect a delay from 5 to 40ms is needed, so this part is perfect for the task. It also has good S/N=80dB, low
THD of 0.5% typ (VIN=0.78Vrms). The supply voltage range is from -10 to -15V.

MN3207: is a 1024 stages BBD by Matsushita/Panasonic which provides a signal delay from 2.56ms to 51.2ms. It also has
good S/N=73dB, low THD of 0.4% typ (VIN=0.25Vrms). The supply voltage range is from +5 to +10V. Because of this
voltage swing, be careful to not to exceed a battery or wall power of 9.2V, as getting too close to 10V may result in a
dead BBD.

CD4046: Is a Phase-Locked Loop IC being utilized as a clock generator driver. It provides the MN3007/MN3207:

A two-phase clock, the frequency value is selected by the LFO.

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5.1 CD4046 as a Clock Driver
The CD4046 has an internal voltage controlled oscillator that is fed with C9 or C9 & C10 when switch SW2 is engaged and
resistors R18 and R19. Resistor R18 and the capacitance of C9 or C9 & C10 determine the frequency range of the VCO.

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The resistor R19 enables a frequency offset. The phase comparator sections are not used in this circuit.

The capacitance between pins 6 and 7 become a “timing” capacitor. Changing capacitance changes the clock rate.
Increasing the clock rate x2 produces the same amount of time delay as having the same clock rate but half the number
of stages. Conversely, dividing the clock rate by 2 mimics the effect of having twice as many stages of delay, producing
twice the amount of time delay. Smaller cap values raise the clock frequency, which shortens the delay times produced,
and larger values lengthen them. Note that such changes shift the entire range up or down, rather than simply
extending the range more in a given direction. So, when the switch is engaged and shorts out C10, it makes the timing
capacitance 1nF, which in turn makes it delay like a 1024-stage BBD chorus. When the switch doesn’t short out C10, the
timing capacitance of the VCO becomes 500pF (capacitors in series do not add together, C= 1 / (1/C1 + 1/C2 + etc)),
which in turn makes it delay like a 512-stage BBD chorus. The larger the capacitance, the slower the delay.

There are limitations to this, due to the designs of how BBD’s work. In general, time-modulated BBD-based effects will
assume some range of clock frequencies used, and incorporate low-pass filtering designed around what needs (or
doesn't need) to be filtered out of the wet signal-path, trying to keep as much bandwidth as is audibly "safe". As a
result, it is generally unwise to raise the value of the clock cap too much, since that may lower the clock rate low enough
to be heard, without implementing changes to the filtering. At the opposite end, BBDs are penalized by having
capacitance on their clock input pins that corrupts the clock pulses coming in at higher clock frequencies unless there is
suitable buffering. The sound quality of such chips depends on a smooth handoff from one member of the bucket
brigade to the next, and the clock pin capacitance makes that handoff clumsier once it tries to go too fast. So, unless the
circuit includes that buffering to keep the handoff crisp and (virtually) seamless, it is unwise to reduce the clock cap
value too much.

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5.2 LFO Low-Frequency Oscillator.
The chorus effect is created by the slow modulation of the delay time using a Low-Frequency Oscillator (LFO). As the LFO
cycles, the delay time goes up and down and therefore the delayed audio pitch slightly shifts up and down.

The LFO is implemented using a dual op-amp TL062 in cascade; this op-amp has a low current consumption, which is
good to prevent ticking in the power supply. Some ticking can be mixed with the audio when the LFO produces the rising
or falling edge of a square wave and there is a very sudden surge in the current.

The first operational amplifier in the chain generates the square wave, while the second operational amplifier generates
the triangle signal.
This simple circuit provides a variable frequency triangular waveform whose amplitude is also variable.

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The first op-amp is in a threshold detector in positive feedback Trigger-Schmitt configuration.
The oscillation frequency can be calculated following the formula of the Triangle Oscillator by Ron Mancini:

fOSC = R14 / (4⋅C8⋅R15⋅R17)


fOSC = 100K / (4⋅0.01uF⋅47K⋅4.7M)
fOSC = 100,000 / (4 ⋅ 0.00000001 ⋅ 47,000 ⋅ 4,700,000)
fOSC = 100,000 / 8,836
fOSC = 11.3Hz
With Rate control at maximum position, the oscillation frequency is 11.3Hz or one oscillation per 88.36ms, this value will
decrease the frequency as the VR1 pot is trimmed.

The second op-amp is an Integrator which generates the ramp. The action of VR2 will modify the steepness of the ramp
and therefore the amplitude or depth at a fixed frequency.

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6. Sallen-Key Filter and Output.
The Sallen-Key is a simple filter architecture used to build second order active filters. It has a high input impedance and
low output impedance, including a buffer amplifier implemented in this case over a BJT emitter/source follower.

A common configuration for BBD based designs is to use a 3rd order Sallen-Key, implemented using a passive 1st order
RC filter + a 2nd order standard Sallen-Key.

So, you can make all the numbers or use the simple 3rd Order Sallen-Key Low Pass Filter Design Tool by Okawa Electric
Design and get the cut-off frequencies.

The R5 resistor is used to sum in the dry signal with the wet signal coming out of the op amp. By breaking this
connection via SW1, only the wet vibrato signal makes it out, changing the pedal from a chorus (wet and dry signal
combined) to a vibrato pedal (only the wet signal).

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Lastly, C5 is a decoupling capacitor along with R11 as a shunt to ground which form a high pass filter.
fc =1 / (2πRC)
Low fc = 1 / (2π⋅R11⋅C5)
Low fc = 1 / (2π⋅100K⋅1uF)
Low fc = 1 / (2π⋅100,000⋅ 0.000001)
Low fc = 1.6Hz
The low frequency cut of 1.6Hz below the audio spectrum is for the purpose of removing the DC levels from the final
output signal.

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Offboard Wiring Diagram
Using a non-switched Miniature DC Jacks and 2 Mono Jacks

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54.6

45.1

9.5

7.2
46.4
DEPTH RATE

VIBRATO
6.4

CHORUS
28.5

CLONE
NORM
STAGE VIB
8.3

10.2

44.5

4/20/2019 5:16 PM C:\Users\evincent\Documents\eagle\Pedals\Lich King Chorus\Lich King Chorus Layout.brd

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