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  #1  
Old 07-27-2005, 03:14 AM
Telecaster Telecaster is offline
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I need a heavy OD that cuts

Help !
With my Les Paul R4 (w. P90's) I can't cut through the bandmix with my (keeley modded) Sparkle Drive and (keeley modded) BD2. My amp is a Z28. With my FatBoost I have no problems cutting through the mix but that's not an overdrive
Any suggestions ? I'm looking for something that has more gain than a TS.
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  #2  
Old 07-27-2005, 04:05 AM
John Phillips John Phillips is offline
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RAT.

It works well as a harder/heavier overdrive if you keep the distortion fairly low, the volume up, and use the filter to adjust the amount of cut.
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  #3  
Old 07-27-2005, 05:05 AM
jlagrassa jlagrassa is offline
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I have know trouble cutting with the Fulltone OCD, half the battle is the amp you use and settings you use with OD or distortion.
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  #4  
Old 07-27-2005, 05:06 AM
hipfan hipfan is offline
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BJF Emerald Green will do it. The Rat is a great suggestion too.
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  #5  
Old 07-27-2005, 05:14 AM
Telecaster Telecaster is offline
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Does the Emerald Green have more gain than the Menatone TBIAC ? I ask this because both pedals are supposed to be "Vox-like" I have a TBIAC but I use it for low gain only.
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  #6  
Old 07-27-2005, 05:20 AM
hipfan hipfan is offline
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Yes, IMO it has more gain. It's also less of an amp simulator and more of a true heavy OD/mild distortion, whereas the tbiac is kind of the opposite.

I haven't directly a/b'd the two pedals though. I'm going from memory of the tbiac that I had a couple of years ago. I have the EGDM on my board right now, and it gets a lot of play.
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  #7  
Old 07-27-2005, 08:35 AM
Telecaster Telecaster is offline
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Ok, the EGDM is on my GAS-list
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  #8  
Old 07-27-2005, 08:47 AM
erksin erksin is offline
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I'd look into a MI Audio Blue Boy or Tube Zone as well...
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  #9  
Old 07-27-2005, 08:49 AM
Telecaster Telecaster is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by erksin
I'd look into a MI Audio Blue Boy or Tube Zone as well...
Good idea. Actually...I have a Blue Boy but it's set to a TS-sound. I think I should mess around with the trimmers tonight.
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  #10  
Old 07-27-2005, 09:37 AM
G'OlPeachPhan G'OlPeachPhan is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by Telecaster
Good idea. Actually...I have a Blue Boy but it's set to a TS-sound. I think I should mess around with the trimmers tonight.
YES. Mess with the trimmers. This is EXACTLY the pedal I was going to suggest for what you are describing. Set the gain around 12 o'clock or higher to taste (12 o'clock is basically like max gain on a tubescreamer, and the BB gets nastier from there), set the tone control around 12 o'clock, and set volume appropriately. THEN, pop off the back... set brightness first - either to match your rig, or even brighter as you suggested you want more cut. Once you get that dialed in, move on to the voicing knob and set that to taste. Finally set the character where you like it. Once you've done all that, go back through and tweak slightly until you've got it where you want, and then do your final gain/volume/tone adjusting via the controls on the outside of the enclosure. I'm convinced the tone you seek DOES live in that pedal as it's hugely versatile.

You know what? I just realized I just layed out the exact instructions that are in the BB manual for adjusting the trimmers!

I actually just sold an BJF Emerald Green as well. I liked the Blue Boy better for my tastes. I thought it was capable of a similar sound depending on how you set the internal trim pots, and I liked the way the Blue Boy interacted better with my guitars, amp, speakers, and other pedals...

To take the Blue Boy even further, I've found it really likes to be hit with a boost pedal as well, and it's certainly got enough headroom to do this well... I especially dig a germanium boost pedal in front of it.
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  #11  
Old 07-27-2005, 10:27 AM
jonny guitar jonny guitar is offline
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Check out the Foxrox Zim. Quality of build and sound are both excellent. Choice of cards makes this pedal cover a ton of ground. Too much to explain on here so check out the link.......here .

The cut and boost feature of the zim allow you to detail your sound to cut through anything. I frequently use mine to record double tracking everything with the same od levels except I change the boost/cut and it gives me a montrous sound.
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  #12  
Old 07-27-2005, 10:49 AM
pacomc79 pacomc79 is offline
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why not use the Fat boost in conjunction with something like the Rat.

Rats are absolutely fantastic (especially the Keeley) as the number 2 in that kind of setup especially with a tubescreamer.

It takes a lot of fooling with and adjustments, some settings suck ass on a rat when you find something that works though, yeah, it cuts.

I'm currently selling my keeley's to upgrade to an Emerald Green Distortion Machine mainly because I want to own something from BJ the EGDM is the dogs testicles and I've had the Rat for a couple of years it's time to change up.

regardless if you have a good boost like the Fat Boost, usually they react plesantly with a bright OD or well defined distortion
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  #13  
Old 07-27-2005, 10:55 AM
John II John II is offline
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Easy. Tone Bone "Hot British". The amount of gain available can rip your face off. Plus, it is super tweakable so you can dial in plenty of mids.

The Tone Bone Hot British is it.

~John
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  #14  
Old 07-27-2005, 11:32 AM
Marcello Marcello is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by G'OlPeachPhan
YES. Mess with the trimmers. This is EXACTLY the pedal I was going to suggest for what you are describing. Set the gain around 12 o'clock or higher to taste (12 o'clock is basically like max gain on a tubescreamer, and the BB gets nastier from there), set the tone control around 12 o'clock, and set volume appropriately. THEN, pop off the back... set brightness first - either to match your rig, or even brighter as you suggested you want more cut. Once you get that dialed in, move on to the voicing knob and set that to taste. Finally set the character where you like it. Once you've done all that, go back through and tweak slightly until you've got it where you want, and then do your final gain/volume/tone adjusting via the controls on the outside of the enclosure. I'm convinced the tone you seek DOES live in that pedal as it's hugely versatile.

You know what? I just realized I just layed out the exact instructions that are in the BB manual for adjusting the trimmers!

I actually just sold an BJF Emerald Green as well. I liked the Blue Boy better for my tastes. I thought it was capable of a similar sound depending on how you set the internal trim pots, and I liked the way the Blue Boy interacted better with my guitars, amp, speakers, and other pedals...

To take the Blue Boy even further, I've found it really likes to be hit with a boost pedal as well, and it's certainly got enough headroom to do this well... I especially dig a germanium boost pedal in front of it.
the blue boy is amazing, so many tones !

hey which germanium boost did you try with it ?
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  #15  
Old 07-27-2005, 12:24 PM
G'OlPeachPhan G'OlPeachPhan is offline
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I've got both a Java Boost and a Hellbilly in front of it set up differently for different sounds. The way these pedals all interact with each other and the volume knob on my guitar gives me every shade of sorta clean but harmonically rich to dirty fuzz and everything in between I've ever hoped for. Bang for the buck factor on the Hellbilly can't be beaten. It may be my favorite dirt pedal hands down, and it's absolutely my fave bang for the buck... the Blue Boy ranks right up there in the bang for the buck category too... In this modern world of boutique dirt pedals selling far in excess of $200, I'd take these two over everything else I've tried. Only $200+ DIRT pedal (not talking about delay/modulation,etc.) that I've ever felt was worth it is the Java Boost; no other pedal has been able to match the singing musical quality of it's tone for my taste.
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