blackhatboojum
Well-known member
Forgive me if this is not posted in the right place but I wanted to share this experience.
I will preface this post by saying, I’ve read quite a bit of information on passive volume pedals. Most of that info was about “tone suck” and the how and why it occurs. Personal experience with my own volume pedal, wasn’t really a “tone suck”issue. It was more of an overall “volume suck” issue. My amps would not feel and react the same with my volume pedal in line. Almost like the volume pedal was choking off the signal from my guitar even though my guitar and pedal volumes were maxed.
Well, out of shear boredom, I decided to run a quick and dirty experiment. I fed a 200hz sine wave into a true bypass looper and hooked up my dmm on the other end. In the loop I put in my Boss FV-50H at max volume.
+2.28 dbm straight through the looper pedal.
Engage the looper and bring the volume pedal into the mix… +.98 dbm. Yep, it does indeed suck overall volume.
I will preface this post by saying, I’ve read quite a bit of information on passive volume pedals. Most of that info was about “tone suck” and the how and why it occurs. Personal experience with my own volume pedal, wasn’t really a “tone suck”issue. It was more of an overall “volume suck” issue. My amps would not feel and react the same with my volume pedal in line. Almost like the volume pedal was choking off the signal from my guitar even though my guitar and pedal volumes were maxed.
Well, out of shear boredom, I decided to run a quick and dirty experiment. I fed a 200hz sine wave into a true bypass looper and hooked up my dmm on the other end. In the loop I put in my Boss FV-50H at max volume.

+2.28 dbm straight through the looper pedal.

Engage the looper and bring the volume pedal into the mix… +.98 dbm. Yep, it does indeed suck overall volume.
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