Since the last layout I did was good on the first try I thought I would try to build another layout. I thought this sounded interesting as an alternative to the Rangemaster.
Take directly form AMZ:
"The classic Rangemaster is thought to have been the source of some of the best tones in rock guitar, from Clapton's Beano sound to some of Brian May's singing sustain tones. While the effect is a simple one-transistor booster, locating a good quality germanium transistor to use in building a clone of the Rangemaster can be a problem. Furthermore, germanium transistors will drift in bias and gain as the temperature of the transistor changes.
If we use the basic Muffer circuit and tweak the values of a few of the components we can produce a simple booster that has a lot of the character of the Rangemaster while being more stable and built from easy to find parts. This booster is best used to overdrive the input of a tube amp or otherwise create a bright boosted response. The gain of the Muffer circuit has been reduced and input capacitor made smaller to create the proper frequency response.
Because the response of silicon transistors to overload is different from that of germaniums, the sound will not be an exact duplicate of the classic effect but it is interesting and useful nonetheless. This cheap booster provides a lot of bang for the bucks - try it out!"
Here's the Layout.
I did my best to make it as compact as I could, but I'm sure that it could be made smaller by someone with more experience/skill, and if the resistors were standing.
Here's the Schematic:
R2 - 1M
R3 - 330k
R4 - 100k
R5 - 10k
R6 - 1k
R9 - 100 ohms
R10 - 100k audio taper
C1 - 0.01uF
C2 - 1uF
C4 - 100uF
Q1 - NPN silicon transistor (2N5088, 2N3904 or similar)