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  2. 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.

  3. Pro Co RAT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pro_Co_RAT

    The signal enters into the pedal, travels through a bandpass filter that filters out high and low frequency content from the signal. It then moves on to the gain stage, which is based around a single opamp , originally the Motorola LM308 (switched to Texas Instruments OP07DP around 2002–2003).

  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. Ibanez Tube Screamer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibanez_Tube_Screamer

    While both pedals could produce overdrive-type distortion at lower gain levels, at higher settings the Overdrive became fuzz-like and the OD-855 had a significant low-end emphasis. [ 5 ] The original Tube Screamer circuit was created in 1979 by Nisshin engineer Susumu Tamura, who wished to design a pedal that better emulated the effect of ...

  6. BJFE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BJFE

    This is a booster pedal intended to use between a low-level instrument such as electric guitar and an amplifier. It’s intended to place in signal chain after overdrive pedals in order to boost level rather than distortion - hence its gain of 18dB (or 8 times). You can of course use it in front of an overdrive to boost the gain for more ...

  7. Effects unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_unit

    Notable examples of distortion and overdrive pedals include the Boss DS-1 Distortion, Ibanez Tube Screamer, Marshall ShredMaster, MXR Distortion +, and Pro Co RAT. A fuzz pedal, or fuzzbox, is a type of overdrive effects unit that clips a signal until it is nearly a squarewave, resulting in a heavily distorted or fuzzy sound.