A common emitter amplifier that sets the input impedance and prepares the signal for clipping. It typically includes filtering to manage highs and lows before they get distorted.

The "heart" of the Muff sound. Two nearly identical stages use silicon diodes (often 1N4148 or 1N914) in feedback loops to "soft clip" the signal twice. This dual-stage clipping creates the characteristic long sustain and heavy compression.

A simple bridge-style filter consisting of high-pass and low-pass sections. Moving the Tone knob balances these two, typically creating a "notch" or scoop in the middle frequencies.

The is a legendary "distortion sustainer" circuit known for its thick, compressed sound and trademark "scooped" midrange. Unlike simpler fuzz pedals, the classic Big Muff (shema) uses four cascaded transistor stages to achieve its massive gain. 1. Core Circuit Stages

Most traditional Big Muff schematics are broken down into four primary functional blocks: