Friday, July 17, 2015

More on Pedals and Pedal Boards

I recently made myself another pedal board. The first one I made would only hold three Boss type regular sized stomp boxes. I never intended to have a pedal board at all, but after I bought my Boss TU-3 Pedal Tuner, well, I suddenly had a pedal. There had been a specific pedal I'd had my eye on for a while but couldn't bring myself to get it. After all, its a signature pedal, and I've got a thing about that,  in fact I could probably write a small book on. But I won't go into that here. The end result is that, I WILL use a signature pedal. Maybe not just any signature pedal, but I will use at least this one.  I got a Wampler Paisley Drive after trying it out a little while and it was pretty much what I thought it might just be. Its a clean boost with a good distortion circuit. Don't get me wrong, its no thrash metal pedal. This thing is more for playing clean guitar sounds. You can put some distortion with it too. It's just right for most of the kinds of music I play. The more Country,Texas Country, Red Dirt leaning stuff is great for the Paisley Drive. Its the perfect pedal for that genre of music. Its great for Blues too, although I feel there are a few out there specifically made for blues that might get the job done a little better. But that's just another personal preference type of thing in my book.

Well hummmm, there's 2 pedals I have now all the sudden. The Paisley Drive made a little bit of noise, though not anywhere near as much as other drive pedals. So I eventually talked myself into a Boss NS-2 Noise Reduction.  And trust me, if you want to run a pedal board, a Boss NS-2 is the way to go. Then, if you must, you can plug in all those old 60's and 70's pedals that were all notorious for noise. Especially when you were using single coil pickups and there happened to be florescent lights overhead.  I have a set of Fender N3 Noisless Pickups in my Telecaster and they still get a little hum out of  fluorescent bulbs when I'm not running my pedal board. They advertise as being without the 60 cycle hum  but they do make a tiny bit of noise. So I know that Boss NS-2 Noise Reduction is still doing its job and then some. For 99 dollars plus tax its a must have pedal on any pedal board.

I started pricing pedal boards at all the big name dealers and for what they were, I just couldn't see the value in the money they were charging. They are basically stamping these things out on high speed presses. And then spot welding and or bolting them together, painting, or powder coating. Some of them attach 4 rubber feet on them. Some boards come with velcro, some come with the board only velcro'd. And most of them come with a cheap case that the zipper lasts about 2 or 3 gigs before the threading starts ripping out.

I had some nice white pine lumber laying around just waiting on something to be built out of it. So naturally one night I was out in my shop looking at the lumber and thinking about guitars etc ,, and said "why not build a pedal board out of this wood"?  I could either "throw one together" that would be about as good as anything else out on the market OR I could even come up with some really cool designs and other things that would make them stand out from the rest.

In my next post I'm going to show you how I built my own pedal boards. I've got a camera reader card to find between now and then but I'll get it done somehow. I'll show you start to finish pictures of how started and how I have already done a little bit R&D on it. I'm also drawing up blueprints and instructions for these in case there arises a need for them again.

So stay tuned .... I've been pretty sick for the past several days and I'm still not up to speed just yet.

~Its All About The Music~



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