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Specifications |
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Brand | Ernie Ball | ||
Category | Guitar Volume Pedals | ||
Height: | 2.75", | ||
Width: | 4", | ||
Depth: | 11", | ||
Weight: | 3 lbs., | ||
Manufacturer Part Number: | P06165, |
It works
This pedal works OK and is quiet. It would have been better if it had some way to adjust sensitivity like some pedals do. It seems like the volume increase is uneven. Quiet, quiet, quiet then loud. I will learn to work with it, but some sort of sensitivity setting would be better.
Pedal
This is the best volume pedal I have used, solid built heavy stays on floor where you put it. This is the pedal if you are working live. A little over priced but worth it.
Ernie Ball workhorse.
This pedal is built for the long haul.
The Third Foot
I play a synth access guitar and route the pups through a multi FX and into the same keyboard amp I plug my GR-20 into. I play worship at church and use the synth to mostly fill out the sound with pads and such. In order to keep the dynamics in place, I often have to pull the volume back on my RP-1000 and increase the synth volume - impossible to do simultaneously as it literally… read more leaves me without a leg to stand on. My Sales Engineer Mark, hooked me up with this item and it is most definitely the solution. I can use the pan function to blend more or less of each signal together. I don't know how other people would use this, but it is a complete solution for me. Kudos: Built as solid as any pedal I've EVER owned. I know people always say "it's built like a tank" but seriously, put a turret on this and it's ready for deployment. The only minus I give is that in mid pan, you get about half of each signal. That may just be the nature of what it's doing - makes sense. Anyway, shifting a bit toward the input you want to emphasize brings the volume back up. I love it. I can now play alternating "duets" switching from the guitar to a synth patch just by rocking back and forth.
No Questions Yet.