MrNovember wrote:Those are Pladask pedals. The Kniv, which is a feedback looper, and the Taken, which is a modulated delay (I think?)
Got mine in the mail today too It’s going to be a good weekend. I swear when you come home from work and there is new gear waiting, it’s the best feeling.
MrNovember wrote:Those are Pladask pedals. The Kniv, which is a feedback looper, and the Taken, which is a modulated delay (I think?)
Got mine in the mail today too It’s going to be a good weekend. I swear when you come home from work and there is new gear waiting, it’s the best feeling.
I get em shipped to my office. It helps make me go to work that week.
Yes! It will scratch ur drum machine itch. Good sounds for what it is, great effects, sequencing.. only slightly annoying to use. Mine is struggling with some functions after four-five years now, might have been a good idea to get a case but 'too late' now.
Overall it's been reliable to me and nice to have as a portable beat calculator through some pedals and a PA or bass stack.
MechaGodzilla wrote:yeah seems a lot more useful than my volca beats, which is nice but sounds a bit weak.
so worth going new rather than used? the new cases don't seem to have drum-specific buttons on
I got my PO12 from an online store but B-stock, and dropped it on a hard floor the first day. So I would think you can get one used and still have it work well.
Its drum sounds are not weak, but you have to tune them to your liking for each pattern separately which means they can vary a bit if chained together.
MechaGodzilla wrote:yeah seems a lot more useful than my volca beats, which is nice but sounds a bit weak.
so worth going new rather than used? the new cases don't seem to have drum-specific buttons on
I got my PO12 from an online store but B-stock, and dropped it on a hard floor the first day. So I would think you can get one used and still have it work well.
Its drum sounds are not weak, but you have to tune them to your liking for each pattern separately which means they can vary a bit if chained together.
tremolo3 wrote:Is it me or pedal builders are becoming more lazy/weird when it comes to labeling controls?
I remember there was a guy doing "thing1", "thing2", "thing3", usw.
And then another one labeling stuff with weird naming conventions.
Anyways... is that Draume a reverb?
My friend was just making fun of how specific the labels were on the pedal I built were. Like, sure, it's named the sorcerer, but I'm not gonna label shit "hex" when I can just say octave down. It's fun for the gear nerds I guess, but I'd rather not have to write a guide for my "super funny" names