Pepe wrote:The Guyatone Dual Octave Box was the octaver with the worst tracking that I ever had. The sound is very cool and synth-like, though.
Making me interested.. Those come up for sale a fair amount, at better prices than this one (unless you're in Aus, maybe).
I've been gassing for one of these forever, but they don't come up a ton. Guess it's gotta be a different circuit, maybe like the Pearl? I want those separate dry/wet outs man, plus it would match my PS-006 delay... https://reverb.com/item/34405006-guyatone-ps-009
Pepe know more than I probs, but the flanger in the PS series is definitely different than the circuit in the flanger in the "Box" series. While the Moving Box flanger is a complete classic, the PS flanger is...odd. And I love it - more limited, but more extreme.
For the right price, I'd personally be willing to give anything in either series a shake, but the right price for the PS series is gonna be lower than the Box series equivalent...imho.
"In a moment of unparalleled genius, Noel Parachute headed off this potential disaster by unplugging the microphone."
I'm pretty sure that the PS models are an own breed by Guyatone. At the effectsdatabase you can see that some other brands used the circuits for pedals under their own flag, but the original models are those of Guyatone.
Yeah, there are other brands that have the PS-004 circuit, but Guyatone was the designer and builder - which I think was usual when Guyatone had deals with other companies. That flanger was also sold as Ampeg, Rozz, Westbury and Tora. For some reason, the Ampegs go for crazy money....
In fact, I haven't been able to find any other flanger pedal that uses the same chip. You can get a Doepfer A-188 eurorack module with the same chip, but you have to provide your own filtering....
"In a moment of unparalleled genius, Noel Parachute headed off this potential disaster by unplugging the microphone."