Funny you mention this - I backed up Dean Ween during their 2012-2015 hiatus, and switched to mandolin when we would play Ocean Man! I used a Para Acoustic DI but it's not quite the best match for my mandolin pickup.
How important is battery operation?
Would there be any point in an FX Loop bypass footswitch?
I'm VERY interested in a battery option for the Red-Eye, as I'd use this as a standalone preamp as well as a preamp/DI. Most would just use phantom power via XLR, but I really, really like the option. If it's not integrated in the PPCB I'd probably find a way to cram one in, even if it means a larger enclosure.
Just a straight 1/4" in / out version would be dead simple, but I'm guessing a lot of the desire for this comes from the balanced / isolated output.
Yes! I was under the impression that the 1/4" Out was less of a "dry thru to amp" and more of a processed signal like the XLR would output. Might be wrong about that..? This would be great when using the Red-Eye as a preamp first in a normal, non-DI signal chain.
Never considered any sort of on/off for the FX loop... hmm
This one isn't a belt clip, I think that's the K&K isn't it?
K&K is I think inherently a belt clip design, but if you look around on the acoustic guitar forums, a decent number of guys use the Red Eye wire tied to their guitar strap or with a belt clip screwed against the lid to make it a belt-mounted pack.
The Red-Eye is largely used on the floor, and the K&K is a clip in order to keep the distance from the instrument's pickup to the preamp as short as possible. I suppose some may rig a way to suspend a Red-Eye, but I can't say I've ever seen that. It'd be too cumbersome.
Ideally it'd be incredible if the PPCB version of the K&K was still a clip, but that would need a battery, of course. Plus, I have no idea what anyone would do about the enclosure! It would be incredibly useful as a normal 125B pedal too, of course. Lots of people use K&K style pickups, and like I mentioned above, the LR Baggs and some others just don't seem to gel with them (even though the Baggs has a whopping 10M input impedance, I believe).