One-offs
Tests, flights of fancy, special editions, etc. If it is listed here, it is in stock and for sale
Sauce Boss
A clone of the discontinued Way Huge Saucy Box. A dense mixture of hard and soft clipping with a clean blend not unlike a K-style overdrive, but with a completely different flavor. The clean path models a Neve recording preamp. While it functions similarly to a Klon, it sounds absolutely nothing like it. Smoother, more supple midrange, and a completely different gain character. $120




Hirsute Fuzz Vintage Deluxe
A fully featured germanium Fuzz Face with NOS military spec OC140 transformers. The standard "fuzz" control has been set to maximum (as it should be). Gain (technically pre-gain) and tone are toggled with the left footswitch, essentially giving you a 2 channel Fuzz Face. VU meter corresponds to the bias of Q2. The sneaky little toggle at the top changes input and output caps to change the character, giving you what feels like 2 different pedals in one. $200



Problem Solver
You’ve got an issue with your tone that needs to be rectified? You need the Problem Solver. A dual rec preamp with the Killdozer “Unstoppable Clean Boost” in front to ensure you get as much oomph as you can possibly need. Searing high end, massive low end, from crunch to crush, and that’s all before you click in the boost. The preamp section is internally charge pumped to 18v for extra headroom and definition. The addition of the Killdozer side ensures that you can get cutting modern metal tones with no flub. $150


Cap'n Crunch
Enjoy the detailed and open crunchiness of a 3 stage germanium overdrive with a HUGE gain range. From warm amp to fuzz, between the Crunch control and the OOPS switch. On the V2 the OOPS toggle has been changed to a footswitch. $120




Reactor
Take the discontinued Bellows fuzz and throw a silicon Fuzz Face in front of it. You have a recipe for absolute meltdown mayhem. The main bypass (green) controls the Bellows side, while the red section gets added with the second footswitch. Not only is it named Reactor due to it's catastrophic levels of liquid gain, but because every stage reacts to the next. Your volume control, the gain, the level, the fuzz control, all changing what comes next in the circuit path. $75

