Home › Forums › Review Your EHX Gear › Nano Series
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December 29, 2010 at 7:07 am #81215The Chili BrianMember
So I am totally new here at EHX, but I already like the community. The thing is, I’ve been a bassist for many years, and then picked up guitar about two years ago. I have just recently started building up a pedal board, but my friend was giving me crap because I like the Nano series, dude to their size, portability, and price. My question is, does it really compromise your tone if you go with the Nano series pedals? Because from what I gather, you just have less options for tonal range, effect range, etc.
Thanks so much,
CodyDecember 29, 2010 at 3:08 pm #113400CryabetesParticipantyou are kind of limited with the Nano series in that you aren’t ever going to have super complex effects like a Nano HOG [prove me wrong Mike Matthews!], but as far as basic effects [and, if you go up to the XO line, some not so basic ones] and whether it compromises your ‘tone’, they’re just as good as many other circuits, and better than quite a few out there.
December 29, 2010 at 4:32 pm #113401Mr.GrimMemberyeah the Nano and XO cases are just re issues of the older effects placed into smaller boxes, you may not find every effect in the new smaller boxes, but the ones you do are the same as the older ones, so no, you wont lose any control options or tone there.
(with exception to the Nano Clone, but do to our complaints here in the forum it has now been replaced with Neo Clone, and the Nano Dr.Q with the bass switch is a bit off, but that just needs a trim pot adjustment and its fine!)
of the “newer boxed EH pedals i own:
Nano Clone
The Screaming Bird
The Mole
LPB-1
Dr.Q
Bass Balls
(Nano Stone on the way)also in the larger (XO) newer boxes i have:
Stereo Memory Man W/ Hazarai
The Worm
Little Big Muff PI
Metal Muff W/ Top Boostand many many more of the old style pedals!
so from my experience IMO, no theirs nothing wrong with using the nano pedals, or tone or control loss!
(the list in my signature was and old signal chain that really really needs to be updated, not an inventory)
December 30, 2010 at 12:17 am #113412The Chili BrianMemberSweet thanks so much. I just needed some reassurance on that haha. For example, I’m using a Memory Toy, instead of it’s larger counterparts Memory Boy and Memory Man. I chose the Toy because it is a lot more gig friendly because it can squeeze onto my board with ease. Also, do you think getting the Micro MM as opposed to the full sized MM w/ Top Boost is a bad decision. I am playing a Squire Classic Vibe Tele Thinline with modded sequence Pickups as my fourth selector position. Mainly I gig often and the full MM is just a little too hefty
December 30, 2010 at 1:44 am #113415Mr.GrimMemberit all depends on how “flexible” you need it to be.
i own the largest full model of the metal muff, but i have test driven the mid sized and nano (pocket) ones.
the smaller you go in the series, you do get less options, they all have the same distortion circuit, sound, and tone. but you lose the option to tweak the tone with an EQ, the smaller ones just dont feature, treble, mid, bass, or top boost options and controls.
** i hate to say this but….i was going to downsize my metal muff with a smaller model, but i ended up with an MXR Fullbore Metal. its the size of a nano pedal, but has all options of the large metal muff and a noise gate built in. it also (IMO) sounds way better, like a Mesa Rectifier amp in full overdrive.
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