Mooer Hustle Drive, drive micro pedal

£9.9
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Mooer Hustle Drive, drive micro pedal

Mooer Hustle Drive, drive micro pedal

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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The pedal also has a further level, tone and distortion knobs. Making it a nice and diverse pedal that can cover a lot of ground when it comes to an array of distortion tones. A wonderfully texturally complex distortion tone. The OCD has amazing distortion harmonics, but manages to stay just on the right side of musical and controllable. It’s a very distinctive tone that is very obviously analogue sounding. Digital pedals have a hard time replicating this pedal exactly as they are intrinsically prone to smoothing and clarifying output.

Mooer Hustle Drive | Overdrive Pedal | GAK

Mooer Audio have made sure the blues sound has been covered by adding yet another blues-style overdrive pedal to their range of clones. This time, Mooer have the Blues Mood pedal, which is a clone of the famous and extremely popular, Boss Blues Drive BD-2. However, Mooer didn't just stop there. No, in fact, they went a step further and cloned the Boss Blues Driver with the legendary Keeley Fat mod. SMALL - AnalogMan Beano Boost, Foxpedal Ebenezer Clean MOSFET Boost, Hotone LIFTUP Clean Boost , JHS Mini Bomb, JHS Pedals The Prestige Booster, Keeley Mini Katana Boost, Mooer Pure Boost, TC Electronic Spark Mini Booster, Tone City All Spark Boost, T Rex Karma Boost, Wampler dB+, Xotic EP Booster The Mooer Shimverb is a reverb pedal that has three options. The main feature to sway someone to get this pedal over other reverbs is because of the Shimmer function. The affordable reverb pedal allows you to toggle between three different reverbs. The first two are your standard room and spring reverb. The third is, as mentioned, the shimmer. This is Mooer's unique verb sound which allows one to create soundscapes and dreamy shoegazing guitar parts. Think along the lines of post-punk and guitar-based indie music from the 1980s. Even if you ignore the shimmer function, the simple spring or room reverb that comes from this pedal is great. If you're in need of reverb at an affordable price, this is a fantastic option. The pedal compares well but not spot on exactly. It certainly does an incredible job of providing a clean and transparent boost with the ability to add the drive as well as the bass to fatten up the sound. But, the RC Booster is expensive for a reason. And that reason is that you really get one of the smoothest sounding boost pedals around. The Pure Boost can get a bit noisy. But is still a great pedal especially considering the price and size. Mix: Allows you to blend the wet & dry signal. I.e. how much of the effect you want to come through in conjunction with your regular dry signal

The majority of guitar players and gearheads out there are under the impression that the Mooer blue comp is a clone of the Boss CS-2. If I'm honest, it was only until I did some investigating that I discovered this is in fact incorrect. The Mooer Blue comp is actually a clone of the often forgotten about, very rare, and old Boss CS-1 compressor. There are a few characteristics and features of the Mooer Blue compressor that give away the fact that its a CS- clone.

User reviews: Mooer Hustle Drive - Audiofanzine

I don't think that it is any secret that the Mooer pedals are, for the most part, clones of other popular and/or discontinued pedals. Like I've mentioned, Mooer have since begun making their own original pedals. But it was these mini clone pedals that have made Mooer so well known. And, gave them the platform to eventually start creating and producing their own pedals. But, if you'd like confirmation that these are definitely clone pedals, we don't have to look too far to actually recognize which pedals these are clones of. let's look at two giveaway factors right off the bat: For me this is a tone that the Strymon Riverside does really well - giving it an added 80’s sheen through its digital processing. I have my Riverside set to two quite different gain stages - Brown on the favourite switch, and a very mild, smooth boost-like overdrive on the manual dials. The Riverside has a fairly smooth profile, it does do high gain distortion, but not with that really dirty grit that certain analogue pedals are so capable of. Hence, the Riverside is not quite the complete all-rounder it needs to be, but it does do certain things very well. As we have mentioned before in our Mooer Hustle Drive Pedal review, there is a high and low mode to this pedal. The high one is for getting louder mids and the low one is for a more neutral and natural tone. There's an obvious disparity in the way each of these bass eq pedals was designed. However, one cool feature about both of these pedals is that they have a level adjustment. This enables you to add a volume boost to your eq, or you can just use it as a clean volume boost. REGULAR - Boss DS-1X, Boss DS-2 Turbo Distortion, DOD Boneshaker, Fulltone Plimsoul, Keeley Stahlhammer Distortion, Malekko Wolftone Sloika, Mesa Boogie Throttle Box, MXR Distortion+, MXR Super Badass / Custom Badass ’78 Distortion

3 : SQUEAL / BOOSTED MIDS OVERDRIVE (≈ Ibanez Tube Screamer pedal TS8 / TS9 / TS10)

I have several distos underfoot. This e Ci used for solos and sometimes I also cheat a little grain of gain that is dirty sound just right. To be honest, I hesitate to take a second. Many guitar players are looking for pedals that they can get to spice up their guitar playing sessions. However, with that many options being sold in the market right now, it is really difficult to decide on one pedal that can last a long time. In this Mooer Hustle Drive Pedal review, we will be looking at this pedal to see if it is worth the money or not. As far as the volume drop is concerned. I have not experienced this "fault" unless of course, the internet is referring to the fact that this pedal produces a volume-drop type of effects. In which case, it definitely does. Trelicopter Vs Demeter Tremulator A similar instance occurred with the Bass eq above whereby it has been claimed to be a clone of another EQ pedal which it clearly isn't. However, let me outline the major differences between the Mooer Graphic G and the Maxon GE-60. Rate: as the name would suggest, controls the rate of the wah. Turn to the right and the sweet speed is increased.

Mooer Hustle Drive Pedal [2023 Review] - Sweetheart Flute Mooer Hustle Drive Pedal [2023 Review] - Sweetheart Flute

The first is that the Mooer pedals have very similar coloring to the original pedals from which they based on. If there color, layout, and font weren't enough of a giveaway, I can surely tell you that the Mooer Hustle Drive is a clone of the OCD overdrive pedal by OCD. In my opinion, the Hustle Drive by Mooer Pedals is not quite as good as the original OCD Pedal, but I'll get into that a little further down. Mooer's bass graphic equalizer pedal. This is based on the Boss GEB-7, the bass version of Boss's famous graphic eq pedal. However, this is the bass version therefore both the Mooer graphic B as well as the Boss GEB-7 have a different frequency range to that of a regular guitar eq pedal.For instance, the fairly recent Strymon Riverside pedal has a mix of analogue and digital processing through four cascading gain stages - starting with analogue JFET transistors before progressing through several stages of digital processing. The strength of this pedal is that you get a high degree of clarity / tightness right along the scale of distortion. However, this means you don’t get the the really gritty / noisy distortion textures that typify certain heavier styles of music. The Fulltone OCD pedal by contrast has a fantastic fuzzy / dirty analogue texture which the Strymon Riverside cannot really fully replicate as its core configuration always leans somewhat towards clarity and audible separation of individual notes. You could say that the pedal is just a tiny touch too clean in some senses. If you're wondering if the Mooer Blade distortion is really a clone of the massive EHX Metal Muff. you can be at ease knowing that it is indeed a clone of this very pedal. In my opinion, it is nothing short of genius how Mooer managed to turn such a large pedal into such a mini clone. There does, however, seem to be a fair bit of debate surrounding the fact that the Mooer Blade could be a Boss Metal Zone. The consensus does seem to learn more towards the Mooer Blade being an Electro-Harmonix clone. For the sake of this Mooer clone list, and due to the fact that my knowledge and experience of metal pedals is limited. I'm going to compare the Mooer Blade and the EH Metal Muff.

Mooer Hustle Drive | Delicious Audio Mooer Hustle Drive | Delicious Audio

As with my take on the ’Klon’ and ’Dumble’, there is usually an aspect of the core tone that I am seeking, and in this instance the OCD is the 5th pedal along in my overdrive chain, and thus the highest in gain of my overdrive pedals - or a little over medium gain as such - and always in the HP voicing.

5: MEDIUM BREAKUP OVERDRIVE (≈ AnalogMan King of Tone / Boss BD-2 Blues Driver pedals)

In all cases you need to be patient and need to experiment when attempting to dial in the best possible tone. All pedals don’t necessarily suit all amps, some are more susceptible to deviation. A case in point is the Diezel VH4 pedal which many loath with a passion, but comes out great for me run directly into the amps (rather than via fx loop). In fact all my overdrive and distortion pedals run into the front of the amps, through Alchemy Audio modded Boss NS-2 Noise Gate and modded Boss GE-7 Equalizer - with Strymon Modulation and FX added at the end of the chain.



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