The Oxblood Distortion was designed to emulate the tone and response of an old Vox AC15 with added gain at the input stage. Unlike other Vox-like pedals which emulate the tone and response of the Vox AC30, only the Oxblood Distortion emulates a boosted AC15.
Unique to the Oxblood Distortion is it's ability to make a "large" amp sound "small" and in hyper-drive with the tone of the AC15.
Also unique to the Oxblood Distortion is it's controlled output. While other distortion pedals use greater than unity gain at output to alter the user's amplifier input stages, the Oxblood Distortion does not. This keeps the true tone and response of the effect intact throughout the initial preamp stage of the amplifier in use.
Verified! Very nice sounding distortion!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the layout and your amazing blog..
Cheers!
Thanks for verifying!
Deletehi, its a beautiful distortion. i built it and work. but if i roll down the gain pot its muted like volume pot, and the hum very noisy. what the problem? thanks
ReplyDeleteNot sure about the hum. But the Gain pot in this effect is supposed to cut the signal if turned all the way down. If you don't want it to do that, put a small value resistor (470Ω-1k) between lug 1 and ground.
DeleteFinally got around to rebuilding/testing & boxing this one up again. Built one years ago and wrote it off as a 'cocked-wah in a box'. I used high(er) gain 2N5088s the first go round. This time, I measured out some 2N4401s in the 295-305 hfe range; lowest-to-highest in Q1 thru Q3.
ReplyDeleteMUCH better-sounding than the 2N5088s. Just my opinion, but this pedal interacts better with single-coils vs humbuckers. It can go from clean-ish drive to crunch to borderline fuzz; overall a 'loose', nasty drive, in a good way.