The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

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The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

Post by coupleonapkins »

Allrite, I gotta admit, reading the Inferior Design (buyer coco b. ware) thread had me majorly bummed for all involved, but also for those companies, and probably everybody else they dipped on.

So here's this thread (dealer's choix?) for a boost. I know that the gear we love is everything else on this board...but what about Superior Produx That Do The Thing Sew Well? Tell me sommethin....GOOD!

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Shubb capo (regular): still going, have only bought 3 in my lifetime, holds my neck just right (unlike my Kyser, which is now in the first aid kit for a quick tourniquet), flies off when I need it to fly, is small & handy. Prix is high, but so am I.

Tortex picks (yella ones): take forever to wear down (I still have a few from high school), light but firm, easily chewable, & in a dark room: always viewable. If Dunlop made a Big Stubby version of the Tortex pick, it would probably look like a caved-in tennis ball & be absolutely awesome.

Nord Rack 2: best Nord, maybe? Does the sounds you're thinkin' of, then sommore. Still vvant a Nord 1, but hen's teeth are also red, rite? Kool-Aid funsize for all your deep 90's desktop knob twizzstin', I will cry when it kicks in another 30 years once the power grid is converted to non-linear isotopes and/or toxic sludge.

Dinty Moore l8r! :snax:

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Re: The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

Post by dubkitty »

some of the modern EXH devices are startlingly good. some of them are kind of goofy, e.g. the Ravish Sitar and keyboard emulators, but they're also putting out a lot of excellent, useful multi-function tools. a long way from the cheap, awful stuff they did in the 70s-early 80s.

i'm a big Fairfield Circuitry fan. i can't use some of their stuff because it's just too far-out for what i do, but it's always full of intriguing possibilities some of which you can't find anywhere else like the variables on the Unpleasant Surprise fuzz.

i adore the old Ibanez Tone-Loc series. i have the Lo-Fi and Phase Modulator, and they're each both functional in a normative context and capable of going batshit crazy.

and though i don't have one, i urge y'all to check out the Epiphone Uptown Kat guitars. they finally fixed the inherent problems with the Wildkat by going to a hollow body with a 335-like center block and loaded it with wicked Firebird pickups. just take off the trapeze tailpiece, slap a Bigsby on that puppy, and Bob's your uncle. i liked the one i tested back when they first came out enough that i really should look into a used one; as you all know i have way too many guitars. but none with Firebird pickups. i'm going to have a hard time saving for a new used car, ain't i?
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Re: The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

Post by Phosphene Audio »

2 entries:


Someone mentioned EHX. I have found problems with some of their pedals over the years, but I have had a Ring Thing since they appeared and I both have never had a single problem with it and really like it's feature set.

I previously used a big box Moogerfooger ring mod, and, if one was comparing the two pedals using clean guitar or a synth, the Moog probably had the edge, but as I am playing distorted guitar 90+% of the time, it sounds fine. The fact that it has presets and can instantly tune to a note one is playing with a button press is also useful. You can use it as a frequency shifter (single sideband up or down, as opposed to both at once). This is a little less cluttered than going full Ring Mod and is what I use. You can do pitch shift with it, but I don't.





I also can't say enough nice things about the Dead Air Studios Projekt V. It is, of course, based on the WEM Project V. It sound incredible and legit has a wide variety of sounds in it. It also has plenty of output available unlike a lot of vintage clones (I'm aware that's just how the vintage designs are, not specifically a flaw, but not useful to me).

I wanted one of the Ghost Warmjets, which admittedly look a little cooler, but this was cheaper, as well as actually available.

On this one, I don't find the second bias pot necessary, but YMMV. The more interesting stuff happens with the first one.
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Re: The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

Post by dubkitty »

i'm specifically referring to the modern EHX digital multi-function pedals and the stuff like the revised Attack Decay, which is just delightful. they're also doing some vintage junk and some pretty goofy features pedals, but the good stuff is really good. the Canyon delay is way better than you'd expect it to be.
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Re: The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

Post by coupleonapkins »

dubkitty wrote:some of the modern EXH devices are startlingly good. some of them are kind of goofy, e.g. the Ravish Sitar and keyboard emulators, but they're also putting out a lot of excellent, useful multi-function tools. a long way from the cheap, awful stuff they did in the 70s-early 80s.

i'm a big Fairfield Circuitry fan. i can't use some of their stuff because it's just too far-out for what i do, but it's always full of intriguing possibilities some of which you can't find anywhere else like the variables on the Unpleasant Surprise fuzz.

i adore the old Ibanez Tone-Loc series. i have the Lo-Fi and Phase Modulator, and they're each both functional in a normative context and capable of going batshit crazy.

and though i don't have one, i urge y'all to check out the Epiphone Uptown Kat guitars. they finally fixed the inherent problems with the Wildkat by going to a hollow body with a 335-like center block and loaded it with wicked Firebird pickups. just take off the trapeze tailpiece, slap a Bigsby on that puppy, and Bob's your uncle. i liked the one i tested back when they first came out enough that i really should look into a used one; as you all know i have way too many guitars. but none with Firebird pickups. i'm going to have a hard time saving for a new used car, ain't i?
I'll always have a place in my heart for the 90's reissues of all the EHX big boxes, which are still where it's at for me. Basically, the middle ground between the early weirdos done in with better components and mostly-common PSU's. They seemed to have endless ideas in the pre-internet age that most other companies have borrowed & are still catching up with (still waiting for a reissued Soul Kiss or Freedom Amp pedal, someday?).

However, I have too many issues with modern EHX build quality, inasmuch that I absolutely stay away from their new stuff, even though it pops up in the Poor/Non-Functioning sections where I frequent my shopping most. But if they were to make something that sounded like the guitars on that Sky Ferriera LP (it was mostly stacks of plug-ins, so maybe that's up their alley), I would have to cave in, but I still feel kinda stupid for even considering the Micro Freeze, knowing what I know and seeing what I've seen over the years.

An Epi Uptown popped up on Dave's a few months ago, and I was super intrigued (it was also only $300!), but I'll have to keep an eye out in the future. Didn't even realize those were Firebirds! :snax:
Phosphene Audio wrote:2 entries:


Someone mentioned EHX. I have found problems with some of their pedals over the years, but I have had a Ring Thing since they appeared and I both have never had a single problem with it and really like it's feature set.

I previously used a big box Moogerfooger ring mod, and, if one was comparing the two pedals using clean guitar or a synth, the Moog probably had the edge, but as I am playing distorted guitar 90+% of the time, it sounds fine. The fact that it has presets and can instantly tune to a note one is playing with a button press is also useful. You can use it as a frequency shifter (single sideband up or down, as opposed to both at once). This is a little less cluttered than going full Ring Mod and is what I use. You can do pitch shift with it, but I don't.

I also can't say enough nice things about the Dead Air Studios Projekt V. It is, of course, based on the WEM Project V. It sound incredible and legit has a wide variety of sounds in it. It also has plenty of output available unlike a lot of vintage clones (I'm aware that's just how the vintage designs are, not specifically a flaw, but not useful to me).

I wanted one of the Ghost Warmjets, which admittedly look a little cooler, but this was cheaper, as well as actually available.

On this one, I don't find the second bias pot necessary, but YMMV. The more interesting stuff happens with the first one.
Moog Ringmod is the absolute ring mod, and I really should've kept one instead of selling 'em (too many of 'em) off a few years ago :facepalm:

Project V is on my list, though I do have a Dirge vs. Ghost Warmjet (Dirge built on a Ghost PCB) I'll probably offload soon (major regerts already, truly, madly, deeply), since i have car repair bills incoming this November.... :cry:

But all of those Dead Air projects are totally smooth, and absolutely worth the time: I have a Bow Echo diy'd prototype that I just love to bits, and I'm trying to keep myself from shelving some pennies away for a Sawzall :snax:

Also, to add to the Delight thread, I'd like to add the Boss Hyper Fuzz, which I still never repurchased, but used almost exclusively for about 15 years before I went all Tone Der Todesking and knew any better. It was endlessly useful! It was pretty much a perfect pedal.

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Re: The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

Post by Dowi »

OG EHX POG. The big box one.
Still have to find something that comes close to that level of grittybutarticulatebutslammingbutuncompressedbutnotdigitalbutstillcristalclear octave.
Plus it's big, and beautiful.
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Re: The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

Post by taco satori »

Phosphene Audio wrote:I also can't say enough nice things about the Dead Air Studios Projekt V. It is, of course, based on the WEM Project V. It sound incredible and legit has a wide variety of sounds in it. It also has plenty of output available unlike a lot of vintage clones (I'm aware that's just how the vintage designs are, not specifically a flaw, but not useful to me).

I wanted one of the Ghost Warmjets, which admittedly look a little cooler, but this was cheaper, as well as actually available.

On this one, I don't find the second bias pot necessary, but YMMV. The more interesting stuff happens with the first one.
Based on this rec I snapped one up recently. Looking forward to putting it thru the ringer. I have an etched DanDubbleEwe Ghost Warm Jet, but I think due to the germanium in there it takes a while to warm up
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Re: The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

Post by Phosphene Audio »

The old giant EH POG was mentioned, and I remember those being great.


A current pedal that gets pretty close to that, with a bunch more functionality in a small package is the MXR Poly Blue Octave. In monophonic mode, it is very gnarly, but in poly mode, it does a POG type thing pretty well. The fuzz and modulation are great, too.






The other thing I have found to be great sounding and useful is the Fryette GPDI. It's a small recording amp. I had several little tube amps that I built laying around the house for years and I got rid of them all after I got this. This one has some kind of analog eq based speaker emulation on one of the outputs. They are supposed to be making one you can load IRs into, but it hasn't appeared yet. I've been recording guitar parts for some friends in another city and I forgot to mic up my cabinet on the first few tracks I sent them. They never complained, but said it sounded great, so I just kept using the thing direct in.

It's one of the rare amps, IMO, with Swiss army knife type gain and eq options that actually can do most things. It won't quite get to hyper high gain saturated metal, but it gets close, and does just about everything else well, down to squeaky clean. You have to be careful to adjust the knobs with your ears, not your eyes, though.
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Re: The Superior Design (Buyer's Delight) Thread

Post by dubkitty »

i neglected to mention probably my favorite maker of the moment, Saturnworks. they sell a plethora of switching boxes, splitting/summing boxes, effects and feedback loops, small boxes which serve as volume or expression controls with a single knob per channel, and other utilities that are bulletproof and dead cheap. i have a 1-to-4 isolated splitter and a 3-into-1 summing box with on/off switches for each channel incorporated into my looping board which are imperative for everything to work properly; they cost me $175. you could get the same functionality from Lehle for 6 or 7 hundred bucks. they're also open to custom work and extremely communicative if you have questions. HIGHLY recommended. 10/10 will shop again.
In girum imus nocte et consumimur igni

FIFTY YEARS OF SCARING THE CHILDREN 1970-2020--and i'm not done yet

DUBZ LOOPZ 2: THE NEXT GENERATION OUT NOW: https://on.soundcloud.com/9HKgc5xbaaYz6FNL7

DUBZ ÄLTER LOOPZ (2012-14): https://soundcloud.com/dubkitteh-1/sets ... ks-2012-14
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