I'm having yet another switching problem:
I want to make footswitch, which turns on an effect. The problem is that, when the effect is switched on, it requires to activate the switch another time to turn the effect off.
I want to eliminate the latter. That means, I want to press the pedal only for as long as the effect is needed and when I let the pedal go, the effect should turn off.
That also means that the switching circuit needs to automatically activate the switch another time to turn the effect off.
How can that be done?
As it turned out... solving this switching problem mechanically proved to be fairly easy, but only now, I'm thinking a step further: how about implementing this switch into my 120-button accordion bass?
That would allow me to press any bass & minor/7th button to control the Live-Styler.de (YamahaStyles) accompaniment; surely better than having to knee a lever!
For that I would need electronic switching. Of course I could do it electro-mechanically, but that would require more power and would be noisier.
So, my question now is: How to render this mechanical switch (below) electronic?
(I'm not sure if the PC-Kbd switches respond to fast pulses?)
Have you considered using a mercury tilt switch? It activates the effect when you aim your hand or foot at a specific spot. Another option is a reed switch, activated by a magnet on your instrument or in your footwear, leaving you to activate the effect only in one place.
If you are motionless when playing the instrument, these ideas could work.