Tone Report Weekly Issue 71 | Page 10

bizarre as it is aptly named. The topology of the Special Fuzz is unlike anything else, as the circuit contains not one, but TWO huge inductors, the type usually found in wah pedals. Inductors aside, there are also 12 transistors. Typical fuzz designs of this era use two or three; the Univox Super Fuzz uses more transistors than almost any circuit, and it features a comparatively diminutive six. The unit features two footswitches; one for a master bypass, labeled “Cancel,” and one that switches between Fuzz and Special Fuzz. The “Special Fuzz” introduces the inductors and outputs a strange, murky autowah-esque fuzz tone. Special, indeed. SRS EQ EXCITER Not much is known about SRS, an American company that only produced two pedals. What we do know is that both pedals released by SRS are awesome and mysteriously named. The company is responsible for a similarly confusing autowah (one of the controls is “Drive”) called the VCO Disco, which suggests a ‘70s release, but we’re talking about the other pedal, the EQ Exciter. Normally when guitarists hear the terms EQ and Exciter, they’re expecting either a parametric or graphic equalizer, or a 10 TONE TALK // “sweetener” pedal like the BBE Sonic Stomp or Aphex Exciter. The EQ Exciter is neither– it’s a thunderous buzzsaw fuzz pedal that will rip your amp to shreds. The two knobs–EQ and Gain–do neither. “Gain” is actually a volume control, and the EQ knob barely resembles a tone knob–it’s a bizarre dial totally befitting of this article, which is probably best described as a frequencyband enhancer. When rolled all the way back, a sludgy low-end dirge pile-drives your amp, and the other end of the control is equally thwacked out. Good luck finding one, but if you do, hold on to your butt. MONTARBO SINFHOTON This Italian pedal recently got a facelift and was revealed at Musikmesse 2014, which is essentially the European NAMM show. This suggests that the pedal was popular enough to warrant a reissue. Personally, I don’t know a single person that’s heard the name Montarbo, let alone Sinfhoton, but apparently its devotees are located in Europe. The pedal’s manual is in Italian, which suggests it was never sold in the US, and here it is now in an article about unknown fuzzes. The circuit is a standard two-transistor design, but a Fuzz Face it ain’t. 9 Old Bizarre Fuzz Boxes You Never Knew Existed