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How to build the jhs pedals 3-series fuzz - short circuit episode: 21

The 3-Series Fuzz represents something Josh Scott has spent years perfecting—a circuit that synthesizes decades of classic fuzzface modifications into a single, accessible build. It's not rocket science, and Scott isn't concerned about protecting this as proprietary knowledge. But for anyone interested in building their own boutique pedal, this episode offers a comprehensive walkthrough of what makes the 3-Series Fuzz unique.

The Core Topology

The fuzzface circuit centers on two transistor stages. Stage one feeds into stage two, with a feedback loop connecting the base to the emitter—a design that defines how classic fuzzes produce their characteristic tone. The fuzz control sits on the emitter of Q2, and this topology remains remarkably consistent across virtually every pedal using this architecture.

How to build the jhs pedals 3-series fuzz - short circuit episode: 21

Scott emphasizes that NPN (silicon) transistors are the standard configuration, though PNP (germanium) alternatives exist. The choice between silicon and germanium isn't a strict rule, but it's become an unspoken convention in the fuzzface world.

The circuit has been traced back to various historical sources—the Vox 816, the Tone Bender 1.5, and mid-1960s fuzz faces—though exactly who first invented this sequence of components remains debated among historians.

What Makes the 3-Series Different

Three modifications distinguish this build from a stock fuzzface:

External Bias Control: This provides an external adjustment for the potential gain on Q2. When you turn it, you're directly altering the ladder of potential—a control that dramatically changes how the circuit behaves.

"The fuzz control is always down here on the emitter of Q2."

Fat Toggle: This modification changes the coupling input capacitor value by adding a parallel capacitor. The math produces different bass and treble frequencies, fundamentally altering the tonal character. It's an easy mod that works on any similar circuit—you'd simply adjust values to taste.

Pre-Gain Control: In the 3-Series Fuzz, there's no traditional fuzz knob. Instead, a 1K resistor fixes the gain at maximum—meaning the fuzz is always fully engaged. The pre-gain control functions more like a volume knob on your guitar, giving you clean boost to drive the fuzz section harder.

The Clean Boost

A crucial addition sits at the output: a common emitter gain circuit using the same transistor choice as a clean boost. This addresses a fundamental problem with vintage fuzz faces—they tend to be quiet. By adding this clean boost stage, the pedal maintains adequate volume without requiring you to keep the knob turned fully up.

The design uses BC848 surface-mount equivalents, though any NPN transistor with reasonable hFE values (typically 100-150) works fine.

The Build Process

Scott walks through connecting power rails, establishing ground connections across the board, and preparing the input stage. The first component connects to a 250k pot for input control—connecting it to both the signal path and ground as you progress toward output stages.

The entire build requires approximately thirty minutes, though Scott promises not to rush too quickly through explanations.

Bottom Line

This episode succeeds because it synthesizes scattered modifications from previous installments into one coherent circuit. The strongest element is how clearly it connects these mods—bias control, fat toggle, pre-gain—to the underlying fuzzface topology that powers them all. Anyone building this pedal can apply the same logic to future projects.

The vulnerability lies in Scott's casual tone—some viewers may want more rigorous technical detail about component values and less conversational filler. For dedicated DIY builders, though, this represents exactly what's been missing: a single place where these mods are collected and explained.

The Core Topology

The fuzzface circuit centers on two transistor stages. Stage one feeds into stage two, with a feedback loop connecting the base to the emitter—a design that defines how classic fuzzes produce their characteristic tone. The fuzz control sits on the emitter of Q2, and this topology remains remarkably consistent across virtually every pedal using this architecture.

Josh emphasizes that NPN (silicon) transistors are the standard configuration, though PNP (germanium) alternatives exist. The choice between silicon and germanium isn't a strict rule, but it's become an unspoken convention in the fuzzface world.

The circuit has been traced back to various historical sources—the Vox 816, the Tone Bender 1.5, and mid-1960s fuzz faces—though exactly who first invented this sequence of components remains debated among historians.

What Makes the 3-Series Different

Three modifications distinguish this build from a stock fuzzface:

External Bias Control: This provides an external adjustment for the potential gain on Q2. When you turn it, you're directly altering the ladder of potential—a control that dramatically changes how the circuit behaves.

"The fuzz control is always down here on the emitter of Q2."

Fat Toggle: This modification changes the coupling input capacitor value by adding a parallel capacitor. The math produces different bass and treble frequencies, fundamentally altering the tonal character. It's an easy mod that works on any similar circuit—you'd simply adjust values to taste.

Pre-Gain Control: In the 3-Series Fuzz, there's no traditional fuzz knob. Instead, a 1K resistor fixes the gain at maximum—meaning the fuzz is always fully engaged. The pre-gain control functions more like a volume knob on your guitar, giving you clean boost to drive the fuzz section harder.

The Clean Boost

A crucial addition sits at the output: a common emitter gain circuit using the same transistor choice as a clean boost. This addresses a fundamental problem with vintage fuzz faces—they tend to be quiet. By adding this clean boost stage, the pedal maintains adequate volume without requiring you to keep the knob turned fully up.

The design uses BC848 surface-mount equivalents, though any NPN transistor with reasonable hFE values (typically 100-150) works fine.

The Build Process

Josh walks through connecting power rails, establishing ground connections across the board, and preparing the input stage. The first component connects to a 250k pot for input control—connecting it to both the signal path and ground as you progress toward output stages.

The entire build requires approximately thirty minutes, though he promises not to rush too quickly through explanations.

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How to build the jhs pedals 3-series fuzz - short circuit episode: 21

by Josh Scott · JHS Pedals · Watch video

e he oh o oh is somebody said play wonder wall in the comments so you got wonder wall hello everybody as usual welcome to the live stream there may or may not be something dysfunctioning because YouTube is needy and Apple OS updates constantly but it looks like we're all good people are saying it's sounding good all right so I'm going to teach you how to build one of my bestselling pedals it is a an amalgamation I like that word it's an amalgamation or a synthesization reaching on that one of just a lot of great Buzz face mods nothing that like I or we at JHS invented but it is something that we synthesized into something that I think is unique I'm sure something's been done close to it but it is a fuzzface topology this is episode 21 this episode 21 yeah episode 21 which is crazy and yeah we're in the midst of fuzzface we're this might be the last fuzz face so I did silicon geranium hybrid three series fuzz you can build it yourself here so I've actually shown you how to build two JHS peddles we did the we did the smiley which is the legends of fuzz this was the first thing I did so yeah we're just continuing the fuz face journey I want to get into tone Bender 1.5 and probably the color sound one knob and then I don't know that I will do the whole let me devise a brand new circuit and hand it to you like I have done on the Electra and lpb1 because you're getting it right here I would say that this would be My ultimate the devised fuzz face from JHS so after all the years of messing with it I'm really proud of this one little housekeeping here let me look over here for a second yeah great crowd thanks for being here we now have YouTube memberships up there should be a link in the description I know Joshua banega is in that chat right now he can check or drop the link so membership it's not going to change anything we're doing content wise but we have a lot of people like hey do a membership it affords us a little bit of an opportunity to put like a person editing some stuff we might normally not ...