chrisdesign's Metal Pedalboard

chrisdesign

chrisdesign

Gear IQ 4918

Metal Pedalboard by chrisdesign featuring Electro-Harmonix Deluxe Bass Big Muff Pi Fuzz, Fender Engine Room LVL5 Power Supply, and Laney Black Country Customs The Custard Factory and 1 more piece of gear

My latest pedal board before going into my Pod Go

Roles: Guitarist, Bassist
Genres: Rock, Metal

More gear photos from chrisdesign

Gear in this photo

This rig

~$476

Value by category

  • Bass Effects Pedals
    64%
  • Effects Pedal Accessories
    32%
  • Pedal Tuners
    4%

Price mix

3

Mix of standard and budget

1 Budget
2 Standard

Bass Effects Pedals

The perfect bass fuzz?

This is the fuzz I have been searching for for years. The blend knob lets me dial in exactly the right amount of fuzz into my signal. The crossover switch lets me sculpt the tone from subtle EQ shift through to crazy synth like weirdness. It’s just perfect!

Effects Pedal Accessories

Solid and works

This power supply just works. It comes with a silly amount of connections so you’ll always be able to power every pedal.

Having 500 mA per socket is great as it powers pretty much every pedal on current.

The downside is no 18v socket.

Bass Effects Pedals

It just works!

Before my experience was with the Line 6 Helix’s compressors. They work fine but I never felt any wow. I just don’t see what the obsession is about. Then I tried The Custard Factory.

I am a weekend warrior, gigging once every month or two in the local scene in an alternative rock band. I play a Thunderbird 5 string and need a solid foundation.

From the moment I turned on The Custard Factory my tone improved immensely! Compression is famously hard to describe, but for me turning the off is like dialling my tone knob back. It just sounds great! My first thought was “I wish I had brought this pedal as soon as it was released”. This is my always on pedal!

The controls are simple to use in a way that the Helix’s aren’t. I literally just messed around and found a great tone in seconds that trashed the more complex studio style compressors I’ve used before. Intuitive is the name of the game. I’m a chartered Human Factors Specialist, and I approve of the designer’s excellent work!

I love that the pedal has a high quality buffer of 1 Meg input, 100k output. It means I need not buy a buffer pedal. Yet the best feature for me is the presence knob. I can dial in a subtle setting to help me stand out in the mix while still fulfilling the bass role.

The construction is solid and the graphics are really nicely printed. I feel this pedal can take some beating, but frankly, it won’t because it’s an always on compressor that never gets stamped on in a gig. Anyway, I’m glad to feel it can withstand an onslaught night after night.

The pedal is also dead silent. There is zero noise even at high compression. The blend knob lets you tame the compression squish in an awesome way. Is a pedal that just works!

While The Custard Factory is pretty unknown in the bass world, I can imagine this being a forever pedal.

On a p bass it gives everything a thick smoothness that is very nice. The blend lets you dial this back to taste, and the presence cuts through. I love it!

If you want a walk of bass thickening your sound, then maybe something like the MXR M87 is better. The custard factory is more transparent like a tool than the MXR’s colouring. That’s not a bad thing at all, and both pedals have their place.

Preferred Settings + Usage:

Speed: Slow Compression: 6 Volume: (whatever matches pedal off) Wet/Dry: 8 Presence: 2

Pedal Tuners

A life long tank

This pedal has been on my board and in my life since 2008, and I cannot see myself replacing it any time soon. It just works great! Sure the new Peterson tuners are more accurate at 0.1 cents over 1 cent, but human hearing is limited to 2 cents, and guitars are imprecise instruments by nature, so I’m good.

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About this setup

This gear photo by chrisdesign features 4 pieces of gear, including Electro-Harmonix Deluxe Bass Big Muff Pi Fuzz, Fender Engine Room LVL5 Power Supply, and Laney Black Country Customs The Custard Factory. The rig is a mix of standard and budget pieces. Artists with this kind of gear are most often found in the Rock, Metal, and Pop scenes.

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