Guitar effects

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Guitar effects are electronic devices that modify the tone, pitch, or sound of an electric guitar, or condition or reroute the signal in some fashion. Effects can be housed in small effects pedals ("stomp boxes"), guitar amplifiers, guitar amplifier simulation software, and in rackmount preamplifiers or processors. Electronic effects and signal processing form an important part of the electric guitar tone used in many genres, such as rock, pop, blues, and metal. Guitar effects are also used with other instruments in these genres, such as electronic keyboards and synthesizers. Electric bass players use bass effects, which are designed to work with low-frequency tones of the bass.

The overdriven sound of distortion, which alters a signal's waveform by "clipping" the signal, is an important part of an electric guitar's sound in many genres, particularly for rock, hard rock, and metal. Filtering-related effects such as equalizers are used to adjust the frequency response in a number of different frequency bands, either for subtle sound shaping, to notch out unwanted resonance, or to enhance certain frequencies. Some filtering effects are used for creating more pronounced effects such as the "crying" sound of the wah pedal, the funky tone of the auto-wah, or the vocal-like sounds of the talk box. Volume-related effects such as volume pedals are used to adjust the volume of an instrument, make notes or chords fade in and out, or create a tremolo effect by rapidly increasing and decreasing the volume. A more complex volume-related effect is the compressor, which acts as an automatic volume control and smoothes out the peaks and valleys in the signal.

Time-based effects such as delay or echo pedals create a copy of an incoming sound which can be used for reverb effects; very long delay times can be used as a looping pedal. Modulation-related effects include the swirling sound of rotary speakers such as the Leslie speaker, the "whooshing" sound of the electronic phase shifter, the psychedelic rock-style flanger, or the shimmering sound of a chorus effect. Pitch-related effects includes octave effects (different effects are able to create octaves above or below the initial pitch) and pitch shifting pedals which can be used with an expression pedal to give a smooth bend-like effect or to add a parallel harmony part to a melody. Other pedals include switcher pedals (used to route a signal between different effects, or to select different guitars or amplifiers); noise gates (for filtering out hum); and multi-effect pedals, which contain many different effects in a single chassis.

Contents

[edit] Distortion-related effects

Distortion is an important part of an electric guitar's sound in many genres, particularly for rock, hard rock, and metal. A distortion pedal takes a normal electric guitar signal and distorts the signal's waveform by "clipping" the signal. There are several different types of distortion effects, each with distinct sonic characteristics. These include overdrive/distortion (or vacuum tube-style distortion), overdrive/crunch, fuzz, and hi-gain.

[edit] Overdrive distortion

Overdrive distortion is a well-known distortion. While the general purpose is to emulate classic "warm-tube" sounds, distortion pedals such as the ones in this list can be distinguished from overdrive pedals in that the intent is to provide players with instant access to the sound of a high-gain Marshall amplifier such as the JCM800 pushed past the point of tonal breakup and into the range of tonal distortion known to electric guitarists as "saturated gain." Some guitarists will use these pedals along with an already distorted amp or along with a milder overdrive effect to produce radically high-gain sounds. Although most distortion devices use solid-state circuitry, some "tube distortion" pedals are designed with preamplifier vacuum tubes. In some cases, tube distortion pedals use power tubes or a preamp tube used as a power tube driving a built-in "dummy load." Pedals designed specifically for bass guitar are also available. Some distortion pedals include:

[edit] Fuzz

Fuzz was originally intended to recreate the classic 1960's tone of an overdriven tube amp combined with torn speaker cones. Oldschool guitar players (like Link Wray) would use a screwdriver to poke several holes through the paperboard part of the guitar amp speaker to achieve a similar sound. Since the original designs, more extreme fuzz pedals have been designed and produced, incorporating octave-up effects, oscillation, gating, and greater amounts of distortion.

Some fuzzbox pedals include:

[edit] Hi-gain

Hi-gain (descended from the more generic electric guitar amplification term high-gain) is the sound most used in heavy metal. High gain in normal electric guitar playing simply references a thick sound produced by heavily overdriven amplifier tubes, a distortion pedal, or some combination of both--the essential component is the typically loud, thick, harmonically rich, and sustaining quality of the tone. However, the Hi-Gain sound of modern pedals is somewhat distinct from, although descended from, this sound. The distortion often produces sounds not possible any other way. Many extreme distortions are either hi-gain or the descendents of such. The Mesa Boogie Triple Rectifier series of amps are an example.

Some hi-gain pedals Include:

[edit] Power-tube pedal

A power-tube pedal contains a power tube and optional dummy load, or a preamp tube used as a power tube. This allows the device to produce power-tube distortion independently of volume; therefore, power-tube distortion can be used as an effects module in an effects chain. Some examples are:

[edit] Power attenuator

A power attenuator enables a player to obtain power-tube distortion independently of listening volume. A power attenuator is a dummy load placed between the guitar amplifier's power tubes and the guitar speaker, or a power-supply based circuit to reduce the plate voltage on the power tubes. Examples of power attenuators are the Marshall PowerBrake, THD HotPlate and Weber MASS.

[edit] Filtering-related effects

[edit] Equalizer

An equalizer adjusts the frequency response in a number of different frequency bands. A graphic equalizer (or "graphic EQ") provides slider controls for a number of frequency region. Each of these bands has a fixed width (Q) and a fixed center-frequency, and as such, the slider changes only the level of the frequency band. The tone controls on guitars, guitar amps, and most pedals are similarly fixed-Q and fixed-frequency, but unlike a graphic EQ, rotary controls are used rather than sliders.

Most parametric EQ pedals (such as the [1] Boss PQ-4) provide semi-parametric EQ. That is, in addition to level control, each band provides either a center frequency or Q width control. Parametric EQs have rotating controls rather than sliders.

Placement of EQ in a distortion signal processing chain affects the basic guitar amp tone. Using a guitar's rotary tone control potentiometer is a form of pre-distortion EQ. Placing an EQ pedal before a distortion pedal or before a guitar amp's built-in preamp distortion provides preliminary control of the preamp distortion voicing. For more complete control of preamp distortion voicing, an additional EQ pedal can be placed after a distortion pedal; or, equivalently, the guitar amp's tone controls, after the built-in preamp distortion, can be used. An EQ pedal in the amp's effects loop, or the amp's tone controls placed after preamp distortion, constitutes post-distortion EQ, which finishes shaping the preamp distortion and sets up the power-tube distortion voicing.

As an example of pre-distortion EQ, Eddie Van Halen places a 6-band MXR EQ pedal before the Marshall amplifier head (pre-distortion EQ). Slash places a Boss GE-7, a 7-band EQ pedal, before his Marshall amp. This technique is similar to placing a Wah pedal before the amp's preamp distortion and leaving the Wah pedal positioned part-way down, sometimes mentioned as "fixed wah," (pre-distortion EQ), along with adjusting the amp's tone controls (post-distortion EQ).

If a dummy load guitar-amp configuration is used, an additional EQ position becomes available, between the dummy load and the final amplifier that drives the guitar speaker. Van Halen used an additional EQ in this position. This configuration is commonly used with rackmount systems. Finally, an EQ pedal such as a 10-band graphic EQ pedal can be placed in the Insert jack of a mixer to replace the mixer channel's EQ controls, providing graphical control over the miked guitar speaker signal.

Equalization-related effects pedals include Wah, Auto-Wah, and Phase Shifter. Most EQ pedals also have an overall Level control distinct from the frequency-specific controls, thus enabling an EQ pedal to act as a configurable level-boost pedal. Some EQ pedals include:

[edit] Wah pedal

A wah-wah pedal is a foot-operated pedal, technically a kind of band-pass filter, which allows only a small portion of the incoming signal's frequencies to pass. Rocking the pedal back and forth alternately allows lower and higher frequencies to pass through, the effect being similar to a person saying "wah". The wah pedal, used with guitar, is most associated with 1960s psychedelic rock and 1970s funk. During this period wah-wah pedals often incorporated a fuzzbox to process the sound before the wah-wah circuit, the combination producing a dramatic effect known as fuzz-wah. Kirk Hammett is a well known guitarist of Metallica who extensively uses a wah pedal in his solos and riffs.Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine also makes Extensive use of the wah pedal.

Some wah-wah pedals include:

[edit] Auto-wah/envelope filter

An auto-wah is a wah-wah pedal without a rocker pedal, controlled instead by the dynamic envelope of the signal. An auto-wah, also called more technically an envelope filter, uses the level of the guitar signal to control the wah filter position, so that as a note is played, it automatically starts with the sound of a wah-wah pedal pulled back, and then quickly changes to the sound of a wah-wah pedal pushed forward, or the reverse movement depending on the settings. Controls include wah-wah pedal direction and input level sensitivity. This is an EQ-related effect and can be placed before preamp distortion or before power-tube distortion with natural sounding results. Auto-wah pedals include:

[edit] Talk box

Early forms of the talk box, such as the Heil Talk Box, first appeared in country music circles in Nashville in the 1940',s 1950's, and 1960's, by artist like swing band pedal steel player Alvino Rey, Link Wray ("Rumble"), Bill West, a country music steel guitar player and husband of Dottie West, and Pete Drake, a Nashville mainstay on the pedal steel guitar and friend of Bill West. Drake used it on his 1964 album Forever, in what came to be called his "talking steel guitar." The device used the guitar amplifier's output to drive a speaker horn that pushed air into a tube held in the player's mouth, which filters and thereby shapes the sound leading to a unique effect.Aerosmith created the popular song "Sweet Emotion" which featured a talk box intro.The singer and guitarist Peter Frampton made this effect famous with hit songs such as "Do You Feel Like We Do" and "Show Me the Way," as did Joe Walsh on "Rocky Mountain Way." Newer devices, such as Danelectro's Free Speech pedal, use a microphone and vocoder-like circuit to modulate the frequency response of the guitar signal. Also Pink Floyd has used this effect with a Dunlop Heil Talk Box in the recording of Pigs and Keep Talking. Some talk boxes include: The Dunlop Heil Talk Box, Rocktron Banshee, and Peter Frampton's own company, Framptone.

[edit] Volume-related effects

[edit] Volume pedal

A volume pedal is a volume potentiometer that is tilted forward or back by foot. A volume pedal enables a musician to adjust the volume of their instrument while they are performing. Volume pedals can also be used to make the guitar's notes or chords fade in and out. This allows the percussive plucking of the strings to be softened or eliminated entirely, imparting a human-vocal sound. Volume pedals are also widely used with pedal steel guitars in country music. It has also been used to great effect in rock music. While volume pedals made of molded plastic with a single mono input are much less expensive, the best quality, most expensive pedals are made of metal, and they have stereo inputs, smooth-rolling potentiometers driven by a sting attached to the underside of the pedal top (as opposed to a rack and pinion style drive) and a "minimum" volume knob.

Some volume pedals are:

[edit] Auto-volume/envelope volume

Just as an auto-wah is a version of a wah pedal controlled by the signal's dynamic envelope, there is an envelope-controlled version of a volume pedal. This is generally used to mimic automatically the sound of picking a note while the guitar's volume knob is turned down, then smoothly turning the knob up. This creates a sound similar to that which can be obtained on bowed stringed instruments such as the violin, in which the guitar note or chord gradually "blossoms" out of the silence. This effect inverts the typical sound of a plucked instrument, in which notes or chords typically start with a strong attack, and then fade away.

An example is:

  • Boss SG-1 Slow Gear [discontinued product]
  • Behringer SM-200 Slow Motion

[edit] Tremolo

Tremolo is a regular and repetitive variation in gain for the duration of a single note, which works like an auto-volume knob. It recreates the sound of rapidly turning the volume up and down, which creates a "shuddering" sound. This is a volume-related effects pedal. This effect is based on one of the earliest effects that were built into guitar amplifiers.

Examples include:

[edit] Compressor

A compressor acts as an automatic volume control, progressively decreasing the output level as the incoming signal gets louder, and vice versa. It preserves the note's attack rather than silencing it as with an envelope volume pedal. This adjustment of the volume for the attack and tail of a note evens out the overall volume of an instrument. Compressors can also change the behaviour of other effects, especially distortion. When applied to the guitar, it can provide a uniformed sustained note; when applied to instruments with a normally short attack, such as drums or harpsichord, compression can drastically change the resulting sound. Compressors can also be used to smooth out the sound of a guitar or bass guitar. Another kind of compressor is the optical compressor, which uses a light source such as an LED or lamp to compress the signal.

Some compressor pedals are:

[edit] Time-based effects

[edit] Delay/echo

A delay or echo pedal creates a copy of an incoming sound and slightly time-delays it, creating either a "slap" (single repetition) or an echo (multiple repetitions) effect. Delay pedals, which may use either analog or digital technology, can be used to create effects ranging from a subtle alteration of the original signal to drastically-altered sounds. Analog delays often are less flexible and not as "perfect" sounding as digital delays, but some guitarists argue that analog effects produce "warmer" tones. Early delay devices used loops of magnetic tape to produce the time delay effect. U2's guitarist, The Edge, is known for his extensive use of delay effects.

Some common delay pedals are:

Another technology that is used in Delay units is a "feedback circuit", consisting of a tracking oscillator circuit to hold a note of the last interval, and, after amplifying the signal, send it back to the input side of the delay. While it was first associated with Boss DF-2 Super Feedbacker & Distortion, currently, the signal feedback circuit is employed by other delay pedals. When used with the "hold" mode (As in Boss DD-3), this circuit will provide a sustain effect instead of simply a delay effect. While the selected note is being sustained, a guitarist can use it as a pedal point to solo over.

[edit] Looping

Extremely long delay times form a looping pedal, which allows performers to record a phrase or passage and play along with it. This allows a solo performer to record an accompaniment, riff, or ostinato passage and then, with the looping pedal playing back this passage, perform solo improvisations over the accompaniment. The guitarist can either creates the loop onstage, or create it before a show and store it for later use (as in playback).

Some examples of loops effects are:

[edit] Reverb

Reverbration, or "reverb", is the persistence of sound in a particular space after the original sound is removed. When sound is produced in a space, a large number of echoes build up and then slowly decay as the sound is absorbed by the walls and air, creating reverberation, or reverb. A plate reverb system uses an electromechanical transducer, similar to the driver in a loudspeaker, to create vibration in a plate of sheet metal. A pickup captures the vibrations as they bounce across the plate, and the result is output as an audio signal. A spring reverb system uses a transducer at one end of a spring and a pickup at the other, similar to those used in plate reverbs, to create and capture vibrations within a metal spring. Guitar amplifiers often use spring reverbs due to their simple and inexpensive construction. Spring reverberators were once widely used in semi-professional recording due to their modest cost and small size.

Due to quality problems and improved digital reverb units, spring reverberators are less-commonly provided in guitar amplifiers. Digital reverb units use various signal processing algorithms in order to create the reverb effect. Since reverberation is essentially caused by a very large number of echoes, simple DSPs use multiple feedback delay circuits to create a large, decaying series of echoes that die out over time.

Examples of reverb pedals include:

[edit] Modulation-related effects

[edit] Rotary speaker

Rotary speaker effects are accomplished by amplifying a sound through spinning speakers or horns and/or by placing a rotating baffle in front of a speaker. This creates a doppler effect, and depend on the speed of the rotation, translates into phasing, flanging, chorus, vibrato, or even tremolo. In addition to the basic rotating speaker sound, other effects created with these cabinets included changing the speed, turning the motor on and off (causing a pitch "wobble" effect), and using two rotating speakers at once, a rich, chorusing sound nicknamed the "voice of God" by Leslie fans.

  • Leslie speakers: The wooden cabinet has rotating baffle near the bass speaker, and a horn speaker that rotates like a siren. Originally designed for Hammond organs, they are also used by some guitarists. Some Leslie enthusiasts claim that that no electronic effects or software modelling devices can duplicate the complex doppler effects that the speaker creates.
  • Fender Vibratone: This is a simplified version of Leslie speaker, containing only a 10" speaker with a rotating baffle.

[edit] Rotary speaker simulator

Electronic Leslie-style effects duplicate the sound of a rotating speaker, but they offer different simulations of the effects of the rotation speed, volume, and pitch modulation. Some Leslie-style pedals can provide two or more modulation effects at the same time. Despite the numerous different analog devices, it is very rare for them to be able to duplicate all aspect of a Leslie speaker. Thus, rotary speaker simulators are always going to be digital, utilizing modelling algorithms to model the relations between the rotating horns and bass baffle, and how the sound bounce around the cabinet. As Leslies also have a tube amplifier, most of these pedals have an overdrive circuit. Some of these pedals can even accept an 11-pin Hammond organ keyboard input.

  • Boss RT-20 Rotary Ensemble Pedal: This is one of the few pedals that is capable of modelling all aspect of a Lesile Speaker.
  • Line 6 Rotomachine: Also a modelling pedal, it is available in a compact pedal size.
  • DLS Roto-Sim: Hybrid of analog with DSP modelling.

[edit] Vibrato

A Vibe or vibrato pedal reproduces the sound of a rotating speaker by synchronizing volume oscillation, frequency-specific volume oscillation, vibrato (pitch wavering), phase shifting, and chorusing in relation to a non-rotating speaker. The modulation speed can be ramped up or down, with separate speeds for the bass and treble frequencies, to simulate the sound of a rotating bass speaker and a rotating horn. This effect is simultaneously a volume-oriented effect, an equalization-oriented effect, and a time-based effect. Furthermore, this effect is typically related to chorus. Some vibe pedals also include an overdrive effect, which allows the performer to add "tube"-style distortion. Some Vibe pedals include:

  • BBE Soul Vibe
  • Voodoo Lab Microvibe

Some vibe-chorus pedals include

[edit] Phase shifter

A phase shifter creates a complex frequency response containing many regularly-spaced "notches" in an incoming signal by combining it with a copy of itself out of phase, and shifting the phase relationship cyclically. The phasing effect creates a "whooshing" sound that is reminiscent of the sound of a flying jet. This effect dominates the sound in the song Star Guitar by Chemical Brothers and Have A Cigar by the Pink Floyd. The song was not played with any guitars but one can hear the phasing effect. The instrument being phased was actually a synthesizer. Some electronic "rotating speaker simulators" are actually phase shifters. Phase shifters were popular in the 1970s, particularly used with electric piano and funk bass guitar. The number of stages in a phase shifter is the number of moving dips in the frequency response curve. From a sonic perspective, this effect is equalization-oriented. However, it may be derived through moderate time-based processing. Some phaser pedals include:

[edit] Flanger

A flanger simulates the sound effect originally created by momentarily slowing the tape during recording by holding something against the flange, or edge of the tape reel, and then allowing it to speed up again. This effect was used to simulate passing into "warp speed" in sci-fi films, and also in psychedelic rock music of the 1960s.

Flanging has a sound similar to a phaser, but more intense, cutting, and metallic, and is closely related to the production of chorus (both involve delaying a copy of the signal by a short, varying amount, and re-combining it with the original signal). Spectrally, the main difference between the flanger and the phaser is that in the flanger, the notches in the spectrum are spaced at equal frequency intervals (similar to harmonic overtone intervals), while in the phaser, the spacing is approximately logarithmic (similar to pitch intervals).

The first pedal-operated flanger designed for use as a guitar effect was designed by Jim Gamble of Tycobrahe Sound Company in Hermosa Beach, CA, during the mid 1970s. Last made in 1977, the existing "Pedalflangers" appear occasionally on eBay and sell for several hundred dollars. A modern "clone" of the Tycobrahe Pedalflanger is sold by Chicago Iron.Famous users of this Flanger effect include Randy Rhoads and Eddie Van Halen. Coincidentally, they both used the MXR M-117R flanger and Eddie Van Halen even has his own signature model now.

Examples:

[edit] Chorus

An electronic chorus effect splits a guitar signal in two, modulating the second signal's pitch and mixing back in with the "dry" original signal. The effect sounds like several guitarists playing the same thing at the same time, resulting in a wide, shimmering or swelling sound. Some common chorus pedals are:

[edit] Pitch-related effects

[edit] Octaver

An octaver mixes the input signal with a synthesised signal whose musical pitch is an octave lower or higher than the original. Effects that synthesize intervals besides octaves are referred to as harmonizers or pitch shifters, shown below. Octave up pedals are often used by lead guitarists to add additional edge and clarity to their solo sound. Octave down pedals are used by guitarists in bands without a bassist who want to add a lower-end sound, or by bassists who want an extended low range without having to buy a 5-string or 6-string bass.

Octave up pedals include:

Octave down pedals include:

[edit] Pitch shifter

A pitch shifter is a device that alters the pitch of the instruments. They are generally used with an expression pedal to give a smooth bend-like effect. Pitch shifters can also be used to electronically "detune" the instrument. The company Eventide were the first company to experiment with a harmonizer. Companies including Digitech followed in their footsteps. Some examples are:

[edit] Other effects

[edit] Feedbacker/sustainer

While audio feedback in general is undesirable due to the high frequency overtone, when controlled properly, it can provide true sustain of the sound (instead of using a distortion/compressor to make quiet notes louder, or a feedback of a signal in a circuit as in a delay unit). Several approaches have been used to produce guitar feedback effects, which sustain the sound from the guitar. The most primitive form, as used by Jimi Hendrix, is to use the feedback created when the guitar is played in front of an instrument amplifier's loudspeaker when it is set to a high volume.

The neck pickup can be used as a driver to push the strings based on the bridge pickup, such as the Sustainiac Sustainer and Fernandes Sustainer. A string driver can be mounted on a stand as in the Vibesware Guitar Resonator, which is driven by the selected guitar pickup(s). Feedback start, stop and harmonics can be controlled here by positioning the drivers distance to the strings and the position along the guitar neck while playing. A signal amplifier can be used to powers headstock transducer, which in turn sends feedback vibration down the string, as in Sustainiac's Model C. A handheld string driver can contain a pickup and driver, as in the EBow, which uses a small electromagnet to vibrate the string, creating a bow-like sustained sound. A dedicated high-gain guitar amp can be used in the control room, without a microphone, as a footswitch-controlled string feedback driver. The microphone is placed on the speaker cabinet of the main guitar amp in the isolation booth or live room.

[edit] Switcher/mixer (or "A/B" pedal)

A switcher pedal (also called an "A/B" pedal) enables players to run two effects or two effects chains in parallel, or switch between two effects with a single press of the pedal. Some switcher pedals also incorporate a simple mixer, which allows mixing the dry guitar signal to be mixed with an effected signal. This is useful to make overly processed effects more mild and natural sounding. One example of the way this mixer can be used is to mix a "wah-wah" pedal can be mixed with dry guitar to make it more mild and full-bandwidth, with less volume swing, or a strong phaser effect can be mixed with dry guitar sound to make the phaser effect more subtle and musical. . Alternatively, a compressor can be mixed with dry guitar to preserve the natural attack of the dry signal as well as the sustain of the compressor. For metal or hard rock guitar sounds, the mixer can be used to blend a "warm" overdrive pedal and a metallic hard-edged distortion pedal.

Examples include:

  • Dunlop A/B pedal
  • Loop Master
  • Boss LS-2 Line Selector (also contains a mixer)

In 2008, a new breed of switching pedal was introduced by Molten Voltage called TOGGLE. It automatically switches channels based on a tap-tempo type control or when the guitar is strummed hard.

[edit] Noise gate

A noise gate allows a signal to pass through only when the signal's intensity is above a set threshold, which opens the gate. If the signal falls below the threshold, the gate closes, and no signal is allowed to pass. A noise gate can be used to control noise. When the level of the 'signal' is above the level of the 'noise', the threshold is set above the level of the 'noise' so that the gate is closed when there is no 'signal'. While some people think that a noise gate is some type of filter that removes noise from the signal, this is not the case. When the gate is open, both the signal and the noise will pass through. However, when a chord or note is being played, listeners do not tend to notice hum or noise that is present, even though this hum might be quite distracting during a pause or rest in the music.

Noise gates are also used as an effect to modify the envelope of signals, removing gradual attacks and decays. For example, if a noise gate is used with a very resonant instrument such as a hollow-bodied guitar, which normally has a long, sustained sound, the sound of the notes and chords can be substantially shortened.

Examples include:

  • Boss NS-2 Noise Suppressor
  • MXR M-135 Smart Gate

[edit] Multi-effects pedals

A multi-FX pedal is a single effects device that can perform several guitar effects simultaneously. Such devices generally use digital processing to simulate many of the above-mentioned effects without the need to carry several single-purpose units. In addition to the classic effects, most have amplifier/speaker simulations not found in analog units. This allows a guitarist to play directly into a recording device while simulating an amplifier and speaker of his choice.

A typical digital multi-effects pedal is programmed, with several memory locations available to save custom user settings. Many lack the front-panel knobs of analog devices, using buttons instead to program various effect parameters. Multi-effects devices continue to evolve, some gaining MIDI or USB interfaces to aid in programming. Examples include:

[edit] Other pedals, effects, and accessories

Miscellaneous pedals and effects include power supply pedals, which can power a number of effects pedals and electronic tuner pedals. Guitarists who use a number of guitar effects pedals may transport the pedals in a guitar pedalboard, which is a flat board or panel which serves as a container, patch bay and power supply for effects pedals for the electric guitar. Some pedalboards contain their own transformer and power cables, in order to power up to 12 (or more) different pedals. Pedalboards assist the player in managing multiple pedals. The entire pedalboard can be packed up and transported to the next location without the need for disassembly.

Pedalboards often have a cover which protects the effects pedals during transportation. There are many varieties of pedalboard cases, including homemade DIY pedalboard cases, store-bought pedalboard cases, and, for professional musicians, custom-made pedalboard cases. Hard shell pedalboard-cases have foam padding, reinforced corners, and locking latches which protect the pedals during transport; during onstage performance, with the lid removed, the bottom of the case serves as the pedalboard. Most pedalboards have a flat surface where pedals and their power supplies are attached using Velcro or other techniques, and they often have a removable lid or padding to protect the pedals when they are not being used. Some pedalboards have handles or wheels to facilitate transportation.

[edit] Samples

Pro Co RAT Distortion Pedal Sound Samples.

Boss BD-2 (Blues Driver) modified to be a Fuzz.

Proco Rat distortion pedal modified by Indyguitarist.

[edit] Further reading

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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