Yngwiestein
New member
This journey took me several years. I started off with an Ibanez TS808, then TS9, then Maxon 808 & Maxon OD9, Home Brew Electronics & various other boutique pedals from Ebay, etc. I ended up with a Fulltone Fulldrive II blue mosfet pedal. I was close but still not where I was trying to go. Something was missing in the equation.
I finally narrowed it down to 2 pedals: Klon & Maxon OD820. It was difficult to track down someone who had a Klon to try but I got lucky and met a dude in a guitar shop who was kind enough to let me attend his band rehearsal and try his pedal. I easily came to conclude that Klons are worth the price they and the 12 week wait to get one. Even then I wasn't entirely sure about it but it probably would have worked out brilliantly anyway.
So the last pedal on my list was questionably worth trying. I had a few Maxon ODs in the past so I wasn't that thrilled about tracking one of these down. I was pretty impressed with the Klon Centaur.
So in a last desperate attempt to talk myself out of buying a new Klon I dug up review after review and all the sound clips & videos I could find of the Maxon OD820. I don't know what possessed me to do it but I came across a brand new one with a best offer deal on Ebay. I made the offer and ended up getting a fair deal.
The whole time I waited for it to get delivered I was thinking about how I should have bought the Klon. LOL! TO my pleasant surprise the Maxon OD820 exceeded its fantastic reputation.
I'm a decent player and have a fair amount of gear knowledge for someone who is not technical but still I see myself as an amateur. So even though I don't have all the savy and technical prowess I'm fairly sure that I can spot an outstanding piece of gear when I play it. The Maxon OD820 is the best kept secret in OD pedals in my opinion. You really have to wonder why they are not stocked in every Guitar Center, Sam Ash or local store.
So about the actual sound. It works as a boost and as a mild overdrive. There is a great amount of headroom and sustain. It's probably about the same amount of gain as an OD9 or a couple of hairs more than an 808 but it's the way it blends with your amp that makes it so amazing. I should note that one big factor in my OD selection was how well it works on different amps. Trust me when I tell you I put this pedal through a trial by fire.
Besides using it against my Fulltone Fulldrive II, I used these amps: Marshall JCM800 & 1959hw, Soldano 44 & Decatone, Matchless Chieftain, Budda Superdrive 30 & Koch Twintone I. So in there is a fine mix of EL34, 6L6 & EL84 amps.
Probably the hardest tests were the Decatone because it has 3 amazing channels and the crunch and OD already sound so fantastic and the Budda Superdrive because it can be very picky about which pedals it likes. The 820 passed with flying colors. My JCM800 was also a good test because even the Fulldrive got pretty grainy. The 820 didn't add the grain but it did brighten it a little. That was easily fixed by nudging the tone knob 2 clicks left.
Notes have so much detail and bloom through the 820. As a clean boost it does a fantastic job. On 0 it really passes the clean signal. As a boost I like it better than the Fulldrive. It's not compressed like the Fulldrive at 9v or OD9 by the way.
Another test was playing my American Special strat through it. The Texmex pickups squash the tone of any amp I played it through. Pedals make matters worse. Anything with compression sounds flat. The Maxon did a very fair job of getting great tone. Not enough to consider keeping the Texmex pickups but the best I've seen so far.
CONT.
I finally narrowed it down to 2 pedals: Klon & Maxon OD820. It was difficult to track down someone who had a Klon to try but I got lucky and met a dude in a guitar shop who was kind enough to let me attend his band rehearsal and try his pedal. I easily came to conclude that Klons are worth the price they and the 12 week wait to get one. Even then I wasn't entirely sure about it but it probably would have worked out brilliantly anyway.
So the last pedal on my list was questionably worth trying. I had a few Maxon ODs in the past so I wasn't that thrilled about tracking one of these down. I was pretty impressed with the Klon Centaur.
So in a last desperate attempt to talk myself out of buying a new Klon I dug up review after review and all the sound clips & videos I could find of the Maxon OD820. I don't know what possessed me to do it but I came across a brand new one with a best offer deal on Ebay. I made the offer and ended up getting a fair deal.
The whole time I waited for it to get delivered I was thinking about how I should have bought the Klon. LOL! TO my pleasant surprise the Maxon OD820 exceeded its fantastic reputation.
I'm a decent player and have a fair amount of gear knowledge for someone who is not technical but still I see myself as an amateur. So even though I don't have all the savy and technical prowess I'm fairly sure that I can spot an outstanding piece of gear when I play it. The Maxon OD820 is the best kept secret in OD pedals in my opinion. You really have to wonder why they are not stocked in every Guitar Center, Sam Ash or local store.
So about the actual sound. It works as a boost and as a mild overdrive. There is a great amount of headroom and sustain. It's probably about the same amount of gain as an OD9 or a couple of hairs more than an 808 but it's the way it blends with your amp that makes it so amazing. I should note that one big factor in my OD selection was how well it works on different amps. Trust me when I tell you I put this pedal through a trial by fire.
Besides using it against my Fulltone Fulldrive II, I used these amps: Marshall JCM800 & 1959hw, Soldano 44 & Decatone, Matchless Chieftain, Budda Superdrive 30 & Koch Twintone I. So in there is a fine mix of EL34, 6L6 & EL84 amps.
Probably the hardest tests were the Decatone because it has 3 amazing channels and the crunch and OD already sound so fantastic and the Budda Superdrive because it can be very picky about which pedals it likes. The 820 passed with flying colors. My JCM800 was also a good test because even the Fulldrive got pretty grainy. The 820 didn't add the grain but it did brighten it a little. That was easily fixed by nudging the tone knob 2 clicks left.
Notes have so much detail and bloom through the 820. As a clean boost it does a fantastic job. On 0 it really passes the clean signal. As a boost I like it better than the Fulldrive. It's not compressed like the Fulldrive at 9v or OD9 by the way.
Another test was playing my American Special strat through it. The Texmex pickups squash the tone of any amp I played it through. Pedals make matters worse. Anything with compression sounds flat. The Maxon did a very fair job of getting great tone. Not enough to consider keeping the Texmex pickups but the best I've seen so far.
CONT.
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