Lobbetto wrote
The breadboard, will certainly be my next purchase, you're absolutely right. So I should first work on the prototype before moving to a permanent achievement, but I honestly thought that being verified layout, I should not have problems, I thought enough an audio probe to find the some problem.
I never build anything I haven't breaboarded first, and I have breadboarded many circuits that I decided not to build, but that's me. It's actually very satisfying because you get to try out the circuit in far less time than it takes to build it. Sometimes you just want to taste it, and then you realize you don't like it enough to build it, or maybe you'd like it better if it had more or less of this or that.
Verified layouts are fairly safe with many circuits, but the risk of a circuit not working or not sounding right increase dramatically when there are jfets involved. The tolerance for jfets is huge, and they often have to be hand-selected to fit the biasing. Very often you can alter the biasing resistors to get them to work, but in many cases that will drastically alter the sound of the circuit. All of these considerations are far easier to handle on the breadboard than they are on a soldered vero or pcb.
With jfet (and bjt) builds, I use the exact same components for the final build that I used on the breadboard. Op-amps aren't nearly as finicky, so I'll often leave the circuit on the breadboard while I populate the build with 'identical' components.
It's very easy to think of all components with the same part number as identical, but with jfets that's not even remotely true.