🎶 Distort, Define, Dominate!
The TC Electronic FANGS METAL DISTORTION pedal delivers ultra-thick, high gain distortion with a super tight response, versatile mid-control, and true bypass for optimal signal integrity, all housed in a robust metal chassis designed for durability.
T**1
Best budget reverb pedal I have tried!
I have tried a bunch of reverb pedals under $50 US, and this one blows them all away! It sounds great, unlike other reverb pedals that sound too "digital" and have a lot of artifacts in the audio output. Its also built like a tank! With regard to the Amazon listing, I was confused as to why the listing said "For checking: Amazon page is for TC Electronic Afterglow Chorus (AFTERGLOWCHORUS) instead of SKYSURFER REVERB", and I still have no idea why they have that on there. I selected the "SKYSURFER REVERB" "style", and that is what I received. Also, this pedal is the closest sounding one I have tried that sounds like the spring reverb in my tube amp! if you're on a budget, this is the one to get!
C**N
Awesome tone!
The TC Electronic Fangs Metal Distortion pedal did not disappoint! Nice rich tone with sharp attack, now has its permanent place on my board.
D**S
Amazing metal pedal for $70...
It's got lots of gain...it is tight and responsive and aggressive...my new favorite distortion pedal and I have several of them...
S**Z
This thing is cool
Used as a preamp, it is pretty great. You could run a very metal sounding mini pedalboard into a power amp and you will be happy. Also it is in a very sturdy casing and the ins and outs are on top of the pedal which is useful if you have a small pedalboard. Its like $40 just buy it.
M**9
Good basic reverb.
Not a ton of difference in the 3 reverb types but good overall.
B**Y
Great Pedal
I’ve owned my share of chorus pedals. This one is simple and easy to use. But the clincher is that it sounds great—nice, deep, lush chorus if and when you want it. My only gripe with this pedal is that it’s so big, taking up a big space on my pedalboard (hence 4 stars). Making that problem a bit better is that the input/output jacks are on the front end of the pedal. Overall, I really like it.
A**R
I love this pedal
I have zero complaints about this pedal, I use it for bass.
C**C
Nice on bass
Just wanted to add a little reverb to my bass pedalboard and can’t complain about tc electronic. Quiet switch, fills out my bass lines on the higher octaves which was what I was looking for.
O**L
Chorus in a box.
This is essentially a repackaged behringer pedal since they use the same circuits in a metal housing and both companies are currently owned by the same parent company.Turn it on and you have chorus. Finding a usable chorus sound doesn't take long. Connect it to a 100mha multi pedal power bank and it works fine.Check out a video online to see if you like the tone, but functionally it's what you'd expect a chorus to sound like.Sounds pretty similar to the boss ch-1 I used to own sans stereo out and an EQ control. It didn't add any noise, at least at practice volumes.
A**C
Cheap gritty fuzz pedal
Used on bass. Creates a nice gritty distortion that is fun to play around with. Just hearing an imperfect synth like fuzz tone inspires you to play trancey doom like heavy riffs. Lost myself for a while there mucking around with it. It does not carry the bottom end quite as well as a dedicated bass fuzz but EQ adjustment after it in the signal chain can help.The tone control affects the fuzz in fun measures, but for me it lost the bottom end of the signal quite a lot. I found that by overdriving the input signal to it with a boss blues driver before it on a clean setting, it brought out a huge presence and restored much of the bass that was lost. Doing this causes the signal to break up at a lower volume too, which is fun, too!The volume does add a usable boost above unity.Overall a good cheap pedal, can be used to get some unique flavour in your signal.
A**T
Jolly nice, good quality, good value analogue flanger
Paid £29.99 12/20. So. In this time when everyone seems to have forgotten why we all loved flangers in the 70s and 80s, I found myself craving a replacement for my first model EHX Polychorus (with Flanger) which I stupidly parted company with many years back. Seeing that this is "all-analog bucket brigade" by a great maker at a good price I took the plunge. Firstly, it is very pleasingly well made. Soundwise it is very good: slightly disappointingly not so gritty-analogue sounding as I remember my old Polychorus to be but very good sounding none the less. The sound is surprisingly cultured and liquid with a dab of phaser creeping in there which could be marmite but there is enough range in the settings and enough usability throught the settings range to produce many usable sounds and to emulate the classic users such as Cult or Police to name but two.Summarising, I am very impressed with the pedal and even more so given the very reasonable price.
D**D
The John Mcgeoch sound at a premium price
Couldn't afford the mxr flanger so after watching you tube reviews i chose this and its just as good. it gets the John Mcgeoch sound i wanted for my Siouxie and the Banshees and Magazine projects im perfecting at the moment
D**D
If it's what you're looking for....
I'm going to start by saying that I love a fuzz pedal. I've been 'playing' guitar for around 13 years now and one of my first 2 pedals was a behringer fuzz and since then I've bought another 3 and tried to build(slightly unsuccessfully) 2 more. I was hoping that, like I hoped with the MXR variac fuzz I last bought, this fuzz might be able to replace the Dr Green (chinese built, not the UK version) Hairy Tongue but sadly it won't be. It's a fine sounding fuzz, it gets really synthy and glitchy and with the tone knob the right person might be able to coax a great tone from it but I'm struggling, I'm finding it a bit too much of these things. My other issue is that I can't seem to bring it up to unity volume with my amp(H&K tubemeister 20 deluxe). Even at full volume I'm founding it never hits the same volume as the amp is clean(I run my amp into a 1st gen focusrite solo and, using Cakewalk as a daw, use torpedo wall of sound to host some own hammer ir's) . I can put a compressor in front of it and get unity, and that, tonally, can be awesome, it can create a really big fuzz sound, but I only have limited board space and don't want to fill any of it with a compressor.I would say that if you're on a budget and want a pretty aggressive fuzz tone you probably couldn't go wrong with this pedal but for me, it won't be staying as a permanent fixture on my pedal board
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 days ago