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  2. Tone Bender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tone_Bender

    The Tone Bender MKII is a three transistor circuit [1] based on the MKI.5 version, but with an additional amplifier gain stage. Sola Sound produced the circuit for Vox (who sold their version as the "Vox Tone Bender Professional MKII"), [5] Marshall (who sold their version as the "Marshall Supa Fuzz"), [6] and Rotosound (who sold their version as the "RotoSound Fuzz Box". [7]

  3. List of distortion pedals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_distortion_pedals

    A 1966 Vox Tone Bender fuzz pedal. Released in 1965, Sola Sound's Tone Bender was a re-creation of the popular Maestro Fuzz-Tone, but with more sustain and intended for the European market. For U.S. distribution, Vox released a version in 1967 based on Sola Sound's MK1.5 Tone Bender update, one of many the pedal went through. With different ...

  4. Fuzz Face - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fuzz_Face

    Sola Sound and Vox had been using the same circuit topology for their Tone Bender pedals earlier in 1966. [2] The Fuzz Face is particularly similar to the Sola Sound unit known today as the "Mk1.5" Tone Bender. The main difference is that the Fuzz Face is biased slightly colder, making it more usable in warm environments. [clarification needed ...

  5. Jennings Musical Instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennings_Musical_Instruments

    The MKII Tone Bender featured a cast chassis as per the original and used New Old Stock Mullard OC-75 Transistors. The Treble booster was to feature a circuit based on the famous Dallas Rangemaster using an OC-44 NOS transistor. Early examples of each pedals are simply spray painted (around 50 Units); later they were powder coated which looked ...

  6. Vox (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vox_(company)

    Vox is a British musical equipment manufacturer founded in 1957 by Thomas Walter Jennings in Dartford, Kent, England.The company is most famous for making the Vox AC30 guitar amplifier, used by The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Kinks, The Yardbirds, Queen, Dire Straits, U2, and Radiohead; the Vox Continental electric organ, the Vox wah-wah pedal used by Jimi Hendrix, and a series of ...

  7. Effects unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_unit

    Fuzz bass (also called bass overdrive) is a style of playing the electric bass that produces a buzzy, overdriven sound via a tube or transistor amp or by using a fuzz or overdrive pedal. Notable examples of fuzz effect units include the: Arbiter Fuzz Face, Electro-Harmonix Big Muff, Shin-ei Companion FY-2, Univox Super-Fuzz, Vox Tone Bender, Z ...

  8. Vox Mark III - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vox_Mark_III

    Vox produced a number of other models of 6 and 12 string electric guitars in both England and Italy. Guitar effects pedals, including an early version of the wah-wah , used by Jimi Hendrix, and the Tone Bender fuzzbox pedal, used by Jimmy Page of the Yardbirds , were also manufactured.

  9. Univox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Univox

    Univox had many effects units, generally made by Shin-Ei, but perhaps their most well known was the Super-Fuzz Pedal, used by Pete Townshend. [3] Univox also produced the Uni-Vibe , a chorus/vibrato that attempted to emulate a Leslie speaker effect, popularized by Jimi Hendrix .

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