jimijames
New member
Re: Original Pedal vs Clone, What Would You Do?
So to be sure, some things you just can't reproduce... Old transistors in fuzz faces for example were all over the map. If you can find a good original with that sound, you might not be able to reproduce that no matter how good your clone is. There's a reason the nkt275 is revered like it is. Similarly good PNP germanium transistors get snactched up as soon as they gain popularity.
But, with op-amp based OD pedals, you're really looking at diodes more than anything. Even the mythical Klon is more about the cannot-find OA126 than the charge pump/od-in-parallel-with-clean-boost setup. You can find the "mythical" TS808 RC4558 op-amp for like 50 cents a unit... And pretty much any diode will work. Hell, even the once-mythical landgraff OD uses 3mm red LEDs for clipping that you can find at any radio shack for absurdly low prices. The carbon comp resistors the thing uses cost more.
Echoplex? The TIS58 is where the conversation begins and ends, even though the humble MPF102 will get you close. And most delays nowadays are all SMD, which is supposed to be anathema to vintage purists... But I'm keeping my malekko 616. Point is that we've learned a lot about why an effect sounds good while the world goes bonkers about the original. I mean, you can recreate the hushed-whisper original Marshall Bluesbreaker or the equally revered analogman KoT for like $60 all said and done... You just won't have the MA856 diodes for the soft/OD clipping (1S1588 for hard clipping is still easy-ish to find) nor the resale value you get with the originals.
So, if you play music live, with a band, in front of people, for less than aerosmith money, it's really hard to talk yourself into these $2k pedals. Plus, with a bass and vocals and drums going at the same time you probably won't hear the harmonic complexity or amp-like response of the OA126 vs. generic small bear electronics germanium diodes that you'd use otherwise.
If you don't want to solder and don't know whether or not you love the effect, I would get the one which holds its resale value. But (1) I would not go for a used DIY effect without gut shots, and (2) unless it's a reputable builder I wouldn't count on it having any resale value. My 2 modded boss sd-1's which have (1) never failed, (2) sound pretty fantastic, and (3) have the 2nd best buffered bypass I've ever heard (1st belonging to the preamp section of the madbean fatpants), and (4) have those rare diodes I spoke of earlier (specifically the ma856 in one and a 5mm LED/OC44 transistor asymmetrical clipping setup in the other) haven't sold even at $35, which is the going price for a used SD-1 without mods.
I know that's a lot of words but basically they mean "buy things which have a resale value unless you're in it to learn how to solder."
So to be sure, some things you just can't reproduce... Old transistors in fuzz faces for example were all over the map. If you can find a good original with that sound, you might not be able to reproduce that no matter how good your clone is. There's a reason the nkt275 is revered like it is. Similarly good PNP germanium transistors get snactched up as soon as they gain popularity.
But, with op-amp based OD pedals, you're really looking at diodes more than anything. Even the mythical Klon is more about the cannot-find OA126 than the charge pump/od-in-parallel-with-clean-boost setup. You can find the "mythical" TS808 RC4558 op-amp for like 50 cents a unit... And pretty much any diode will work. Hell, even the once-mythical landgraff OD uses 3mm red LEDs for clipping that you can find at any radio shack for absurdly low prices. The carbon comp resistors the thing uses cost more.
Echoplex? The TIS58 is where the conversation begins and ends, even though the humble MPF102 will get you close. And most delays nowadays are all SMD, which is supposed to be anathema to vintage purists... But I'm keeping my malekko 616. Point is that we've learned a lot about why an effect sounds good while the world goes bonkers about the original. I mean, you can recreate the hushed-whisper original Marshall Bluesbreaker or the equally revered analogman KoT for like $60 all said and done... You just won't have the MA856 diodes for the soft/OD clipping (1S1588 for hard clipping is still easy-ish to find) nor the resale value you get with the originals.
So, if you play music live, with a band, in front of people, for less than aerosmith money, it's really hard to talk yourself into these $2k pedals. Plus, with a bass and vocals and drums going at the same time you probably won't hear the harmonic complexity or amp-like response of the OA126 vs. generic small bear electronics germanium diodes that you'd use otherwise.
If you don't want to solder and don't know whether or not you love the effect, I would get the one which holds its resale value. But (1) I would not go for a used DIY effect without gut shots, and (2) unless it's a reputable builder I wouldn't count on it having any resale value. My 2 modded boss sd-1's which have (1) never failed, (2) sound pretty fantastic, and (3) have the 2nd best buffered bypass I've ever heard (1st belonging to the preamp section of the madbean fatpants), and (4) have those rare diodes I spoke of earlier (specifically the ma856 in one and a 5mm LED/OC44 transistor asymmetrical clipping setup in the other) haven't sold even at $35, which is the going price for a used SD-1 without mods.
I know that's a lot of words but basically they mean "buy things which have a resale value unless you're in it to learn how to solder."