Hey Dellamorte,
Good work copying all those nets from that old drawing. I was studying the original L5 circuit a while ago and found some of it very hard to read. (low-res scan I guess)
Your schematic looks good, but may I politely suggest a few things that will make your drawings even better? These are my personal opinion of course:
- Don't use angled lines for wires. It's better to make a bit more room and take a few right-angled turns. Lining up stuff visually really helps make things look neater.
- Beware of text that is obstructed by other parts. The text is important and I always like to make room for it. When you print out your drawing in black, text that is covered by wires or other parts will be unreadable.
- Further to the idea of reduced visual clutter, I would also say to use as many straight lines without turns as possible. Usually this just means nudging a few parts so that lines can connect straight into the part. See for example your TREBLE pot, or the MID-FREQA and B pots.
Before I start into too much checking on a complicated circuit I usually do the things I've listed above. I find that with less visual clutter and a more "readable" circuit drawing, errors are much easier to spot.
Cheers!
Good work copying all those nets from that old drawing. I was studying the original L5 circuit a while ago and found some of it very hard to read. (low-res scan I guess)
Your schematic looks good, but may I politely suggest a few things that will make your drawings even better? These are my personal opinion of course:
- Don't use angled lines for wires. It's better to make a bit more room and take a few right-angled turns. Lining up stuff visually really helps make things look neater.
- Beware of text that is obstructed by other parts. The text is important and I always like to make room for it. When you print out your drawing in black, text that is covered by wires or other parts will be unreadable.
- Further to the idea of reduced visual clutter, I would also say to use as many straight lines without turns as possible. Usually this just means nudging a few parts so that lines can connect straight into the part. See for example your TREBLE pot, or the MID-FREQA and B pots.
Before I start into too much checking on a complicated circuit I usually do the things I've listed above. I find that with less visual clutter and a more "readable" circuit drawing, errors are much easier to spot.
Cheers!