Zvex Handpainted Super Duper 2-in-1 Overdrive/Distortion Pedal

$339.00
Maximum quantity available reached.

Sku: 855245003176
Brand: Zvex
Description:

Introduction:
Gentlemen/women, start your engines. This pedal is so dangerous that Zvex is sure they’ll be getting a lot of complaint emails that people have blown up their amps using it. So let’s just start this off by saying ZVEX WARNED YOU TO BE CAREFUL. When using this pedal, start off slow, and monitor your amp for potential damage. Don’t have too much fun! OK, have too much fun, but don’t blow up your amp in the process. Unless that’s what you want, of course, and well, gosh darn it, it’s your right. Good ol’ Pete Townsend did it. Well, at least he poked his speakers out. All right, Zvex’ll try to stay on track here.

Ahem. The SUPER-DUPER 2-IN-1 has two of Zvex's infamous but rather delightful Super Hard-On pedals in one small box. Also, in this SUPER-DUPER 2-IN-1 is a Master Volume control that lets you use it as an overdrive/distortion with any output volume. "My my! How conventional", you say! Well, suffice to say, if it weren’t there, you’d go deaf with both of those channels cranked up. This pedal is dangerously loud. Don’t do what Zvex did, and lean over in front of your speaker cabinet while turning it up. Ouch. Dang.

Channel 1:
This channel is a conventional Super Hard-On, which Zvex will henceforth refer to as the SHO, in order to reduce potential offense to young ears and sensitive persons. Its gain control is on the far right, and it’s LED is yellow. If you are familiar with the SHO, you’ll know that it’s a very sparkly sounding high input-impedance preamp with incredible headroom, wide-ranging gain (unity to 60 X), and a maximum volume that will knock out your fillings. Channel one has no Master Volume control, but it’s cascaded into Channel 2, which does...

Channel 2 and the Master Volume:
This channel has the very same circuit as Channel 1, but the bleeder resistor on the output has been replaced with a Master Volume control, which allows the user to turn down the output volume even if the gain is set quite high. The knob on the left is the gain, and the middle knob is the Master Volume, and the LED is red. When both channels are on, or if only Channel 2 is on, the Master Volume is active. If you leave the Master wide open, you have two identical SHO pedals in one box, which are cascaded.

What does this pedal sound like?
You might wonder just how insane this pedal sounds when you crank up both channels and turn them both on. Zvex could’t get their Les Paul to stop feeding back at any audible volume level on their Marshall when both channels are wide open, and that’s with the amp set at 1. They're happy about that. Of course, this is not the only setting on the pedal. They don’t think there’s a musician around who wouldn’t be happy to have multiple clean boost pedals set to predictable levels available on stage. This pedal gives you a total of four volume levels, ranging, at your choice, anywhere from perfectly clean to ragingly overdriven. Level 1, your guitar is true-bypassed with both channels off. Level 2, you turn on Channel 1. Level 3, you turn off Channel 1 and turn on Channel 2. This is easy because you can put your foot on both switches at once and alternate between the two channels if you want. Level 4, you turn on both channels.

There is no tone shaping in this pedal. It’s two perfectly linear high-gain high input-impedance preamps that can be cascaded, with a total gain that ranges from unity to 3600. That’s right, the maximum gain with both channels wide open is a whopping 3600, which is so completely distorted, hissy, feedbacky, and insane, that you’ll never ever have a steady relationship again. Or a lease. Or a pet. Luckily, with the Master Volume, you can listen to what it would sound like to lose everything you love at a reasonable volume. Naturally, because there is no tone-shaping, your guitar just sounds like a really loud version of your guitar, and your amp sounds like a really big version of your amp, and if your normal tone is so