SATURNWORKS ABC BOX
This pedal was custom built for me by Bryan at Saturnworks Pedal company. I usually switch back and forth between my Tele and my Gretsch a couple times per show, and on a few songs I play the fiddle or tenor guitar, so I needed a way to make all that happen seamlessly and without a bunch of crawling around on stage looking for cables, causing a huge delay between songs. Originally I was running a DOD 270 AB box, but I wanted to have three inputs so I could run both guitars and my acoustic DI. I checked out the Morley ABC, which looked ok, but it lacked independent volume pots for each channel, which I wanted since the Gretsch is a bit quiet and the DI box is hard to adjust the volume on mid-song (not to mention that the passive clip on fiddle pickup I run doesn't have a volume control either.) One day as I was poking around online looking at boutique pedals I found Saturnworks, and got ahold of Bryan just to chat about the stuff he had up on his website. He mentioned that he does custom jobs, and we came up with this pedal, which he built in less than a week for an unbelievably reasonable price! Basically, the box allows either 3 in / 1 out OR 1 in / 3 out. In addition, all 3 channels can be selected individually or together, so theoretically you could run 3 amps simultaneously, which seems unnecessary but potentially awesome. I'll stick to 3 instruments run to one amp for now. Individual green LEDs are a nice touch that a lot of switcher boxes don't have, and all the components are top-notch. If you need something built, contact Saturnworks- great work at great prices. It's pretty cool to have a one-off ABC box that provides full functionality for all my needs.
SO, I've examined my guitars in my last couple of posts, and they take up 2 positions on the ABC, so I'll quickly look at the third channel input- my acoustic DI.
LR BAGGS PARA ACOUSTIC DI BOX
I've played acoustic instruments for most of my life,
Also, the phase inverter is a godsend- if you start feeding back, just push the button and the feedback disappears. Any residual noise can be filtered out with some additional tweaking of the mids and notch. The box features a 1/4 inch IN and OUT, with an additional XLR out to the house system; this XLR also grabs phantom power from the PA. There is also an effects loop which I haven't used, since this box is in-line with the rest of my pedals and I'm not really interested in running my fiddle with effects... yet. There is also a Gain knob which can add a bit of boost and slight grit- it sounds cool turned up with my very bass-y archtop tenor guitar.
My only complaint is that, if you're not running off phantom power, you have to resort to a 9v battery. This is frustrating to me because I don't want to deal with a battery dying in the middle of a set, or at all, period- that's why all my other gear is powered by adapters. Additionally, if an instrument is plugged into the input, the battery is engaged, so even if I'm only playing acoustic instruments during 10 percent of the set, I'm using battery power 100% of the time. I thought I could get around this problem by using a battery-only adapter cord that came with my 1Spot, but it turns out that the battery compartment isn't wired with a battery clip- it just has contacts similar to a flashlight or lantern. So if you can use phantom power, do it. Otherwise, carry extra batteries. This gripe is small, though, compared with the awesome control and tone shaping abilities that this DI provides.
WELL, now I've examined all three inputs (Tele, Gretsch, and DI) along with the ABC box. But before the effects pedals comes the tuner. I spent a long time deliberating over which one to get, but ultimately I decided to go with the:
KORG PITCHBLACK CHROMATIC TUNER
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"SOB" STUTTER PEDAL
This is the first pedal I built, and I've kept it in my chain because, quite frankly, I'm proud of it. It's a pretty basic box- analog in the truest sense and totally passive. Basically it passes the signal unmolested until you step on the Normally Open momentary switch. When the switch is depressed, it shunts the signal to ground. This creates a cool 'stutter' effect when you stomp the switch in rapid succession, preferably with the beat. I added a 1000k Ohm pot that regulates how much signal goes to ground; the range is from full kill to slight volume variation, which can create a cool analog tremolo effect or just add some weird layers to solos or open chords.
OK, that's it for tonight. I promise I'll try to keep moving on this topic as soon as I can. Next up, the MXR Micro Amp.
1 comment:
Guitar rig setup question?
tap tempo pedal
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