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  2. Ibanez Tube Screamer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibanez_Tube_Screamer

    The "Tube Screamer" name was born when Tamura and Hoshino took an OD808 to Sam Ash Music in Manhattan, where Sammy Ash—the company founder's grandson—remarked that the pedal sounded like a "screaming tube amp," and noted that the Dunlop Cry Baby wah-wah pedal was so-named for sounding like a crying baby. As a result, the OD808 was renamed ...

  3. Treble booster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treble_booster

    Many treble boosters made in the 1960s were designed to not boost the signal much. Vox even decreased the output of the American made version of their treble booster because they were afraid that the signal would overload the amplifier's input stage. [1] Today, overdriving the input is considered one of the key features of a treble booster.

  4. Fulltone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulltone

    Fulltone USA Inc. is an American manufacturer of effects pedals for the electric guitar.Founded by Michael Fuller in California in 1991, Fulltone was one of the first "boutique" pedal companies [1] and became best-known for its overdrive pedals, the Full-Drive and OCD, with the latter dubbed by Music Radar "one of the most legendary overdrives ever made."

  5. Klon Centaur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klon_Centaur

    He wanted a "big, open" sound, with a "hint of tube clipping", that would not sound like a pedal was being used. [1] He experimented with the Ibanez Tube Screamer, but was not satisfied. [1] With electrical engineer friends, including the MIT graduate Fred Fenning, Finnegan developed prototype pedals in his spare time over four and a half years ...

  6. Pro Co RAT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pro_Co_RAT

    The original RAT was developed in the basement of Pro Co's Kalamazoo, Michigan facility in 1978. [1] Numerous variations of the original RAT pedal are still being produced today; it has become one of best selling guitar effects boxes of all time, with some retailers placing it in their top-ten most-sold pedals. [2]

  7. List of distortion pedals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_distortion_pedals

    The OD-1's "overdrive" referenced the pedal's asymmetrical-clipping, tube-like distortion, [38] which stood in contrast to the brash sound of "fuzz" pedals on the market. [40] The OD-1's layout was simple—with only "Level" and "OverDrive" controls. It was an immediate success, paving the way for future compact overdrive pedals.