Skreddy Hybrid Fuzz Driver Pedal

$229.00
Maximum quantity available reached.

Sku: SKREDYHBRDFZ
Description:

The Skreddy Hybrid Fuzz Driver™ brings your guitar sound alive.

This is vintage tone.

Features a germanium output transistor for warm, tube-like, soft, fuzzy breakup.

Sounds like: Jimmy Page, Joe Perry, Stevie Ray, EVH, and David Gilmour--none of whom, of course, endorse this product.

Skreddy Pedals™ Hybrid Fuzz Driver combines the best aspects of our popular Screw Driver and Lunar Module pedals into a format optimized for humbucking pickups.

To counteract the tendency of some humbuckers towards muddiness (caused by excessive bass), the Hybrid Fuzz Driver keeps low frequencies from over-saturating. This lets you hear that gorgeous bell-like attack with the woody tone of your Les Paul instead of a brick-wall-compressed buzz or excessive coloration, even when you turn the gain way up high.

With single coils, you get all that lovely chime and with a nice, hot top end that makes your Strat's in-between settings really sparkle and pop out like you've always wished they would. This is great news for those of you with RWRP middle pickups: No more dark, un-usable out-of-phase settings!

• Headroom, openness, and clarity are all incredible for a fuzz-based effect. You will hear the TONE OF YOUR GUITAR, with its natural eq and attack, coming through--not a fuzz tone superimposed upon it; no thinning out or muddying up, and no excess compression or congested feel.
• Guitar volume clean-up is superb, No change in tone as you roll off your volume--it just cleans up gradually and predictably.
• As you turn up the gain of the input transistor (mid boost), you get boosted mids and highs, hotter harmonics, and higher gain but without losing chord tightness and string definition.
• The volume control is set up to match unity gain of high-output pickups at around noon, and of course there is PLENTY of boost available.
• The tightness control is mild and well-balanced, with no excess bass boosting at counter-clock-wise but just low-mids, for a denser, thicker tone. And of course extra tight jangliness--but still not too thin--at clock-wise. Neutral eq is noon of course.

Rides the edge

Lets you play in that magical zone between clean and dirt, between overdrive and fuzz

Works great with ALL types of pickups (especially humbuckers) and specifically intended for guitar-volume cleanup. You're only getting half of this pedal if you never play with your volume knob rolled back.

The term "hybrid fuzz" refers to a silicon transistor--in this case a BC109C--driving a germanium transistor--in this case an AC127. There's also a 3rd transistor, which is the input stage: a BC109C set up with tight bass response and boostable mids.

Never mushy; you'll get a chimey, biting attack--even with your neck pickup. Never harsh either: dig in for buttery harmonics and hold on for soft, compressed sustain. Cleans are organic and natural sounding; high-gain, sustaining notes & chords stay articulate and cut through.

Controls:

Volume, Fuzz, Tightness, Presence, and Mid Boost.

• The Tightness control dials in the amount of bass going into the distortion section, to tighten up your sound or allow its natural fatness to come through.
• The Fuzz knob controls the tamed-down hybrid fuzz section (old-school silicon into germanium) and takes you from clean through touch-sensitive overdrive all the way to light but sustaining fuzz.
• The Presence control lets you get a lot more brilliance and bite or make it darker and smoother, to suit your amp and taste.
• The Mid Boost control sets the gain of the oldschool silicon input stage, and is set to boost mids rather than full range boost. Gives you more aggression and compression but not more wooliness and bass. Almost cocked-wah sounds at max!
• The Volume control is set up so that high-output pickups should achieve unity gain between noon and 2:00 o'clock.

Unity Gain: Since any dirt pedal will compress your signal, you'll get roughly the same volume no matter how hard you hit the strings, when it's on, yeah? So here's how you figure what constitutes "unity gain" with the HFD pedal: turn it to bypass and hit a chord LOUDLY. Now turn the pedal on and do the same thing. Turn up the volume of your HFD until its volume roughly matches your bypassed volume when you are hitting a loud chord.