I couldn’t find a layout for the FS-77 anywhere, but I did find some photos online, so I decided to try and trace it back in November 2020. I thought I had it, but when I looked at it again recently, I noticed the input didn’t look right. The caps were the wrong way around for an input blend… hmmm. If it’s not an input blend, what is it?
So I went looking for more information, and recently someone was kind enough to share some photos with me (you’re a legend), which completed the picture – I was a bit lost without the additional photos, and had mistaken the blend pot for an input blend, which is not uncommon on D*A*M designs.
THE BONES OF THE FS-77
So what is the FS-77? Like most Fuzz Sounds, it’s a Tone Bender MKIII with tweaks.
- The collector resistor on Q1 & Q2 is only 4k7, as opposed to 10k
- 4.7uf input cap, with a 10n to ground
- Usual 220pf cap across collector and case of Q1 is 47pf
- Sonically the biggest change is the tone & blend controls, which are based on a Big Muff tone stack. The blend is a kind of a mid-range control, based on the same idea as the AMZ presence control. The blend pot changes the high-pass filter cut-off, which forms one half go the BMP tone stack.
D*A*M FS-77 FUZZ SOUND SCHEMATIC
ASSUMPTIONS
There are some component values that I’ve not seen, all other values have been seen on photos.
- Fuzz, tone and volume have been assumed based on normal tone bender values used by D*A*M
- Initially I had a 25k pot for blend, but after testing it, I’ve landed on 50k. Try some different values, maybe you prefer a 25k – the 50k just has a slightly wider range. Being a BMP tone control, it’s easy enough to tune to your personal taste, even if the stock FS-77 values are a little unfamiliar.
- The 220n between the tone and volume might be a different value – looks the same as the 220n on the board, and is large enough to not impact the frequency response after the tone control
TONE CONTROL
Despite being a BMP based tone control, they’re not even close to typical BMP values
It does allow a mid hump, as well as a bit of a scoop on some settings.
Bass, low-pass filter
220k & 2.2n = 329hz
Treble, high-pass filter
25k pot: 10n cap & 1.5k – 26.5k = 600hz to 10.6khz sweep
50k pot: 10n cap & 1.5k – 51.5k = 300hz to 10.6khz sweep
LTspice – tone & blend swept in values from 1, 50 & 100% (50K blend pot)
ON THE BENCH
It works… it gives you some classics tone bender MKIII tones, and then some more modern sounds as a result of the tone control.
The blend provides a nice sweep, and works well with the tone control. There’s a lot of useable tones in there. I prefer the 50k pot as you get more range.
I ended up using a wider piece of tag board as I’m going for a landscape layout in the enclosure.






