definitely call Barry ZuckercornMaybe lawfirm Fumble&Fumble? I am not familiar with their reputation though.
definitely call Barry ZuckercornMaybe lawfirm Fumble&Fumble? I am not familiar with their reputation though.
sells "mods" to their own pedal for a $40 cap.https://www.pettyjohnelectronics.com/product-page/corex New pedal series from Pettyjohn. Not one, not two, but ELEVEN dirt pedals. They all have the same control layout and come inunfinishedpower coated silver Gorva S90 enclosures with laser engraved labels. You can see some crud stuck into the labels in the product photos...
Edit: oh and they start at $279
But it also has in/out buffers for zero tone loss or loading, and a pro quality footswitch!sells "mods" to their own pedal for a $40 cap."ultra musical"!
Fairfield Circuitry cheese and exist lawsoot incomingI like the no labeling
Technically lower profile than printed labels!Low Profile Laser Engraved Labels
"No Compromise Electronic Design"But it also has in/out buffers for zero tone loss or loading, and a pro quality footswitch!
That was the part that confused me. Are these digital pedals? Or did they use digital models as the basis to design their analog pedals? Like am I playing through a NAM of a Klon, or am I playing through a Klon that was voiced to match a NAM of a Klon?"Voiced with digital amp profilers and modelers"
All your favorite digital models, no longer in one place!
No no no, this is much more advanced than the digital models - there's a high and low pass in each pedal! I'm sure those fancy digital profilers can not pull off such technological feats."No Compromise Electronic Design"
Perhaps they should have, um, compromised?
"Voiced with digital amp profilers and modelers"
All your favorite digital models, no longer in one place!
They used a digital profiler and/or modeler as a workbench amp to design it, is what I guess it means. Why does that matter you ask? Who the fuck knows, I answer.That was the part that confused me. Are these digital pedals? Or did they use digital models as the basis to design their analog pedals? Like am I playing through a NAM of a Klon, or am I playing through a Klon that was voiced to match a NAM of a Klon?
So instead of actually testing the pedals with multiple amps they can test them with digital approximations of multiple amps?They used a digital profiler and/or modeler as a workbench amp to design it, is what I guess it means. Why does that matter you ask? Who the fuck knows, I answer.
I think it’s just poorly worded ad copy trying to say that when they were developing these pedals, they tested them with both real tube amps and digital models to make sure they sound good into either an analog or digital front end.That was the part that confused me. Are these digital pedals? Or did they use digital models as the basis to design their analog pedals? Like am I playing through a NAM of a Klon, or am I playing through a Klon that was voiced to match a NAM of a Klon?
https://www.pettyjohnelectronics.com/product-page/corex New pedal series from Pettyjohn. Not one, not two, but ELEVEN dirt pedals. They all have the same control layout and come inunfinishedpower coated silver Gorva S90 enclosures with laser engraved labels. You can see some crud stuck into the labels in the product photos...
Edit: oh and they start at $279
I think it’s just poorly worded ad copy trying to say that when they were developing these pedals, they tested them with both real tube amps and digital models to make sure they sound good into either an analog or digital front end.
I like how they went out of their way to powder coat the enclosures but chose the one color that makes them look unfinished.... why, if they added a graphic, that would legitultimutually increase the cost by ... like ... double or treble the amount!
Oh absolutely. Several of the bigger builders are using 3D renders instead of actual product photography anyway.These days I'm sure there an AI tool to let you retouch in seconds. And it will probably add stuff that wasn't there originally.