I started out wondering: "How variable are
JFETs? How many parameters must be measured when selecting them?" I ended up with a grungy overdrive/distortion: the Stupid FET Trick.
Looking at the
2N5457 datasheet from Fairchild, you can see that drain saturation current (I
DSS) and gate cutoff voltage (V
GS(OFF)) are correlated:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiXYAKpqIGY0Q9hx-LNbZ2fBJx_KAL9Ok-rDfGTzVEVLntATL_W3evfA2IZ9ljyk1bPa6TiqhyMC4lA5KQwl_EDSIXAWpB59c_kteINFLwmxn8yeilLlm6MmDlAeORtVBmvlqtHwdTBbQ/s200/parameter.GIF)
I've seen other methods on the web for selecting FETs to use in audio, and they generally involve selecting for gate cutoff voltage, since this affects the operating point. I
DSS is much easier to measure, or at least to select for. In my case, I was designing a circuit using the stock CircuitMaker model, which has an I
DSS of 3.859 mA at 15V. (The range of values in the datasheet are 1.0 mA to 5.0 mA.)
The model's behavior was determined with this little test circuit simulation:![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhdbWr_Kv6WAY8h_QMvV8XO2IHdnoh03dzBmJ6j5XolNREFzDGUYAfqB-apspVvZPP9QbegnRBGNPtJ2RjiJmIn6QbXMktHMRP0xdVMgaTaxLIbWnbhYYYFNpgI61VImmcphZb3hrX1rQ/s200/2n5457idss.png)
The device test circuit is not much more than that. It needs a supply voltage somewhat greater than the reference voltage in the datasheet (I have an 18V regulated supply), has gate and source tied together, and has a drain resistor set to drop the supply voltage to about the reference voltage with saturation current flowing:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgypm9QbOggUm61-oT_5LS6Yf8XnM0fK051_eerCfFE8Ktq0xpcDd1WmW78V3r_o9KmWrlVE9RsgsAb2dm7XBxtrFjac6ra8-Fi1XcylnvgzaixNk8U6V3XDSZPnacG1iIScvKyj1YOhA/s200/2n5457test.png)
You don't really have to have a close-tolerance on the resistor; just measure its actual resistance and use that to select the range of voltages it will drop for the range of currents within your design tolerance.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjjoVBue8OREvq1vPje97EVPpRl36f4yWcdRY9HoDKfQC4GvwXIGvNVAYzXpZkfmcfBrggSozLHR7RsPoQLPbIHtC8oybv1iV02_LcLC2CsfZQAOaERSqnUwg-iMI-FOGjFcbCZ2GHMVQ/s200/FET-CKT.png)
I needed five 2N5457s that were within 5% of the Circuitmaker model. I bought 100 (for 8 cents apiece at
Mouser), and I tested 40 before I found six that were within my range. Most of the others were under and a few were over (not surprising since the selected value was in the upper portion of the range).
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEje1hUbCv0JOmCg3R9WgRTig4tWY-CvLH8K1E3-lgcAl9TVGyXoKSVICkbBgpNGeMvS_PcGoe7rHTc_Siy6zvMiHxJvRTTw-3pQN8K_XVIBKaEZ6-DQ3D51eaq4qRMSwWriQMC6PULdiQ/s200/FET.jpg)
My circuit was nothing earth-shaking, just a few ideas taken from typical tube guitar preamp design with the JFETs substituted in, and component values adjusted to get a meaningful operating point at battery voltages. I didn't do a thorough scientific verification of the gain in the real circuit, but the measured operating points were all within 10%. (Even though I selected the JFETs at 5%, the resistors were 10%). It doesn't really sound like a tube amp, but it is better than the last distortion unit I built (some 25 years ago), the Tube Sound Fuzz from Craig Anderton's
Electronic Projects for Musicians. I continued my tradition of natural aluminum enclosures, and aside from the name of the unit, I only used pictograms for the legend (Skull & crossbones = gain; heart = tone; quaver = volume). I'll have to design the next JFET circuit around a device with a lower I
DSS (and V
GS(OFF)) to use up the ones I have left.
Coming soon: Interstellar Overdrive!