Mine is a white dot... But, frankly speaking, there are days that I don't like it at all you know. My amps are a bit on the tweedy thicker side you know.
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A tonebender with a bias control can probably get you what you want. I'm getting one of these - reasonable price ($180), classic tone, fat/thin switch so you can get thin and cutting or nice and chunky, and just straight up awesome sounding.
I recently did a Tone Bender MkII circuit and a FF circuit for 65 Amps, with a few mods and stellar components,
thats the thing about germanium ff. they are the most cantankerous pedals ive ever used but when they are doing what i want them to they are awesome and tweeds are pretty thick sounding already
Fuzzes are notoriously sensitive to transistor types, gain and biasing. Hendrix went through aFuzz Faces by the box to pick the good ones. They are ultra simple circuits, so the only difference between an awesome one and a crappy one is component type and values. Frank's probably used hand picked transistors (vintage NOS germanium transistors are what we are used to hearing, but even with Silicon there is a wide range of tones available) with matched Hfe values and appropriately selected bias resistors for his specific transistors.Ive always found this odd... The original pedals that everyone is trying to cop the tone of were made of whatever junk components they could find. Now people talk about all these high end voodoo grade components all to improve a lo fi made in the shed with dime store parts sound.
Fuzzes are notoriously sensitive to transistor types, gain and biasing. Hendrix went through aFuzz Faces by the box to pick the good ones. They are ultra simple circuits, so the only difference between an awesome one and a crappy one is component type and values. Frank's probably used hand picked transistors (vintage NOS germanium transistors are what we are used to hearing, but even with Silicon there is a wide range of tones available) with matched Hfe values and appropriately selected bias resistors for his specific transistors.
Fuzz prices remind me of the story of the Engineer that visited Edison's generator and fixed it. You're not paying for the components, you're paying for the knowledge on how to use the components and the time it took to acquire and sort transistors for gain values in the correct range.