iariass's Pedalboard
Untagged pedals: Quirón (Custom Moded Klon Centaur by Lomus Pedals), Dualtron Delay (Based on Wampler Faux Analog Echo by Lomus Pedals) and Expression Knob (by Lomus Pedals).
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Gear in this photo
This rig
~$1,324
Value by category
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Guitar Synth Pedals
18%
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Multi Effects Pedals
18%
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Reverb Effects Pedals
14%
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Harmonizer & Octave Effects Pedals
14%
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Wah Pedals
8%
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Overdrive Effects Pedals
8%
Price mix
Mostly standard
Hotone SP20 Soul Press II Volume Wah
Avg price: $106.51
Utility wah-volume pedal
First, I think Hotone has interesting pedals in the market and I recommend to check out some of them because it's a little bit undervalued brand.
I agree in the fact that the sounds of this Soulpress are not exactly like the rest of the wahs we are more used to hear, because it has limitations on the sweepness and tone, so maybe you can find it less expressive. Despite that, I find it very comfortable and well-sounding, it just does the job for the most of the wah-wah guitar's sections. The option to chose between a warm or classic tone it really can be heard, and the Q knob works correctly.
I don't use the volume function very often, but it's so cool to have this 2 in 1 and in a very compact pedal which is great for small pedalboards like mine.
Also, some people talks at forums about noise in the signal (which I don't have it) and the fact of the LEDs being covered by the foot (which it's true), but I don't find these things like a real trouble.
Avg price: $56.15
Essential, Simple & Cheap: One of my favourites of Mooer
I like so much how this pedal squeeze my signal and gives more body to the sound. Also the Volume and EQ options are very useful. I just wish this pedal has a blend control, but it's ok because this compressor can be very subtle if you want. It's almost always on when I play, especially on my clean sound.
Preferred Settings + Usage:
Everything at 12 o'clock works very well for me. I just touch EQ a little bit when I need more brightness.
Harmonizer & Octave Effects Pedals
Avg price: $182.05
Harmonizer, Octaver & Whammy: The versatility made a pedal
It's incredible how this pedal can create a whole amount of sounds with just 2 knobs, 1 switch and 1 button. The tracking it's very good and can work polyphonic acceptably, but I don't find very confortable making chords in another tuning like a pitch tuning pedal, because sometimes sounds weird to me.
The use in which this pedal shines, it's like a octaver/harmonizer, just giving a lot of intervals for harmonizing your notes, providing from organ-like sounds to very experimental guitar, or just a octave up/down, which is an very typical and useful tool. Also I find it the latch mode so satisfying for making whammy effects or even octave down and play it like a bass, it's just a versatile, all in one pedal that I don't regret buying. Everybody should try it and will be very tempted.
For a optimal pedal control, I recommend connecting an expression knob.
Avg price: $102.24
More than a classic overdrive
My first transparent overdrive that I've ever used, I replaced a SD-1 with this one and I don't regret the buy. This Blues Driver pedal makes my guitar sounds like the classic overdriven amp that I've heard thousand of times in a lot of records, it's organic. Just for that, is a winner.
But this pedal hides in their circuit more than a classic overdrive, because when you turn the gain up it's shows that it can be a distortion/fuzz pedal, it can do the job nicely.
I usually do my gain stacking with a Klon after the BD-2, and it's sounds very strong. But my main use for this BD-2 it's for a rhythmic guitar. Some people say it's weird to do solos with this pedal, it's true, it sounds a bit strident, but you only need to do some EQ on the amp (or a pedal) to get rid of this frequencies that are out of the way.
Electro-Harmonix Nano Big Muff Pi
Avg price: $80.19
It's not for everyone or every genre, but it rules in their style
The nano big muff has a very characteristic EQ with no mids which is in fact the special and iconic feature of the pedal, providing a huge and dark distorted sound. It's so unique that is not a very versatile fuzz pedal and that's why I added some mods for having 2 more alternatives of distortion/fuzz sounds.
Avg price: $79.99
Great 1 knob booster
It just works like it supposed to do. It sounds very transparent when I want more volume of my main overdrive (Boss BD-2), but it can also push my clean amp a little bit to get a crunchy sound. So, it's an excellent tool for guitar solos because I can barelly notice a colour/tone change, it may be there, but it's subtle.
Avg price: $59.50
Versatile, a lot of mod sounds in a tiny pedal
It takes some time to figure out all the possibilities for the settings of depth and rate. It has some options that are not very "musical", extremely weirds for a normal playing, but the chorus, wahs and tremolos have a very good quality. The rest are just ok for the price.
Preferred Settings + Usage:
Nowadays, I use this pedal only for the J-Chorus effect, it sounds very crystalline and I love it. I dial the depth almost to the maximum and rate almost to the minimum, for me it's the perfect chorus sounding.
Avg price: $173.33
Great sounding mod effects
Maybe it's not the ultimate compact multi-modulation pedal but it really worth the purchase if you're in the search of one. The main reason is the high quality of the effects, the 6 of them sounds awesome, the knobs are very responsive and it's easy to dial them if you know how they work.
I also like how the secondary parameters and the alt functions are made, they are easy to understand it thanks to the great design of led lights, these really help you a lot to figure out all the possibilities.
The most limitating con is that there are only 4 presets that you can save with the pedal itself, and if you want more you have to set it manually (and it can be a little chaotic, because of the secondary parameters) or using an external midi controller. If Alexander wants to improve this pedal, they should upgrade it to 6 presets, 1 for each effect that it has, it makes sense to me.
Preferred Settings + Usage:
I personally keep my 4 presets with tremolo, phaser, flanger and vibe. The chorus sounds fine too, but I use another pedal for that which sounds slightly better to my ears. The filter effect is wild, in a good and a bad sense, I like to set it manually when I want some bubble sounds, but I feel like it's not very comfortable to discover how to use it properly (unlike the others effects).
Avg price: $184.28
Strong character reverb pedal
This pedal has his own character, which is something very cool if you like the underwater sounds that can produce, but can be a lack if you want something more like a bright and classical reverb. Although I also consider it versatile, but it has his own limitations.
I love all the parameters from the Fathom and it deserve the purchase just for the Sonar mode, which is delightfull. But actually my favourite function is the Sustain footswitch, that not too many reverb pedals have and it's very versatile and a interesting feature. That's why it's going to be my main reverb pedal for a very long time.
The only disadvantage I've found on this pedal it's the always-on modulation sound, because the switch only gives you 3 options for the mod intensity, but not the capability to turn it off. If you experiment with the X knob it can be found a few spots in which the modulation is more subtle, but still there.
Preferred Settings + Usage:
For "subtle" modulation, I set the switch to Low and turn down to minimum the X knob.
About this setup
This gear photo by iariass features 12 pieces of gear, including Swiff Audio C10 Tuner Mini Pedal, Hotone SP20 Soul Press II Volume Wah, and Mooer Yellow Comp. The rig is mostly standard pieces. Artists with this kind of gear are most often found in the Rock, Pop, and Alternative rock scenes.