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| The Stomp Box Effects pedals and their effect on your playing. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 296
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Fuzzzzz
I just got to try a fulltone 69 fuzz for the first time. I was really impressed by this pedal. Specifically, it sounded great with a fender style amp and really had great dynamics with the volume pot on the guitar. It sounded way better than any of the other distortion pedals the store had on display. $169 beans is a lot though. Just thought I'd share the experience.
I'm interested in adding a fuzz to my pedal board. I've only used overdrive pedals as most other "distortion" pedals don't do it for me. But the grit of this fuzz was great. And so controllable. What exatcly is the difference between fuzz and distortion anyway. I'd also be interested if anyone had any comparison of the 69 fulltone with the analogman sunface.... |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Tele-Holic
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Farmingdale, NY
Posts: 554
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The whole OD/Fuzz/Distortion thing is a bit murky. Fuzz usually involves hard clipping of the signal, and is a "buzzier" tone. But it is a type of distortion. Distortion is something that sounds more like a Marshall turned all the way up.
I own an AM sunface NKT 275, it's a great pedal. Pricier than the 69. I've never done a side by side test of the 2 units. They're both based on the same circuit, you have 2 good chefs working from the same recipe. Fuzz face clones are pricy, while the circuit is simple, about 10 components, you need 2 matched transistors of a type that is no longer made. And those transistors had huge variances. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
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diff between Fuzz and Distortion...
the difference between the 2 is like night and day to me.
distortion waveforms tend to be a mix of a fuzz and tube or 'soft' clipping. distortion pedals also tend to be a bit more 'modern' - you tend to get more tone controls and options and such. they also tend to have multiple gain stages, each one being designed a little different. also distortion pedals seem to capitalize on both even and odd harmonics. fuzzes are designs from yesteryear. they tend to be pretty stripped down, just a few gain stages, 1 or no tone knob. the waveform tends to be fairly square in many of them - to give that unique fizz to the upper end. to my ears most fuzzes tend to be mostly odd order harmonics, with some or alot of octave - up effect as well. IMO distortion sounds like an attempt to control a gained out sound. Fuzz is more about letting go - being out of control. my favorite fuzzes are the ones that tend to be a bit out of control, or buttery smooth. i don't tend to like those that fall in between. also some fuzzes capitalize on diode clipping. ODs and distortions also may use diodes, but most attempt to smooth out the diode clipping. fuzzes tend not to. silicon diodes especially can make a fuzz buzz for days...
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#5 (permalink) |
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Tele-Holic
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 731
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There was a brief period of time in the '90's when the red Dunlop FF used NKT275's. If you search around, you can find them for very little money, and they're very close to the originals sonically.
The '69 is nice enough, but it's a little too smooth and refined for me. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Friend of Leo's
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Go to the Voodoo Lab website.
Voodoolab.com
They have downloadable samples of their various pedals. Give the Superfuzz a listen then the Sparkledrive. Nice examples that show the distinction between overdrive and fuzz.
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http://www.lukefisher.com/blame.wav |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 296
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Hey,
Thanks everyone for replying. Quote: "Nice examples that show the distinction between overdrive and fuzz." I'm very familiar with overdrive. I love the sparkle drive and have come very close to buying one on many occasions. I'm more curious about fuzz vs distortion. Quote: " Distortion is something that sounds more like a Marshall turned all the way up. " I always thought that OD is what sounds like an "old" marshall turned all the way up. The distrotion pedals that I have tried seem to add more of a solid state preamp distortion to an already good sounding fender tube amp. They seem more buzzier. The thing about tube screamers and overdrives in general is that to me, they don't sound "thick and meaty" unless they are really pushing the amp. They sound kind of weak at lower amp settings. Opened up, they sound great but underpowered they are just too midrangy to me. The fulltone fuzz sounded really warm to me. At lower guitar volume settings it sounded more like an OD but at full guitar volume it sounded like a raging marshall. This through a fender champ. |
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