Home › Forums › Review Your EHX Gear › fender/vox amp trem type sound from Pulsar?
- This topic has 5 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 1 month ago by julian.
-
AuthorPosts
-
October 7, 2009 at 7:58 am #79092noisepolluterMember
Does anyone use their Pulsar specifically for the whole “vintage amp trem” thing? I tried a Carl Martin Surf Trem recently and was extremely impressed at how “amp-like” they’d managed to make it. Obviously as the Pulsar is more versatile, if I could get that same sound out of it, it would be the logical choice.
Anyone had experience of both pedals or a Pulsar and an amp trem?
November 15, 2009 at 5:01 am #103753John JMemberi haven’t any experience with the surf trem, but the Stereo Pulsar beats the Twin Reverb Tremolo (“Vibrato”) by a mile. or at least i think so.
if you adjust the symmetry properly, you can nail the twin tremolo. on most settings i actually found the pulsar to be preferable when it comes to ‘amplike tremolo,’ the triangle wave is smoother than anything on any amp ive ever played and it gives you the ability to get the sound thats in your head so long as you’re willing to work for it. my only complaint is how touchy it is; you’re never more than a nudge away from something wild. also: extreme settings yield a minor volume drop, although it’s way less drastic than the boss tremolo and it’s only present on really deep depth settings.
i ended up getting rid of it and getting a wiggler instead, which is the MOST amplike tremolo out there. the tremolo is a smoother triangle wave than the twin, which i like, and the ACEY vibrato is identical to the vox tremolo. you sacrifice some versatility but the wiggler does most of the ‘normal’ stuff the pulsar can do and it’s way easier to get the sound you’re after.
if all you’re after is normal tremolo tones, it’s worth checking both out – the pulsar is cheap, potentially crazy and it can do the fender thing to a tee; the wiggler offers basically every modulation effect you would hear on records released before 1974 and it’s way less touchy.
hope it helps!
November 15, 2009 at 9:15 am #103759DreamhunterMemberHow would you set a (steteo) pulsar for the fender type of sound? Especially the symmetry, the other 2 controls are easier to set
November 15, 2009 at 4:17 pm #103766John JMemberif you turn the symmetry knob so that it fades out slightly quicker than it fades in, you get a really subtle choppiness that sounds (to my ears) identical to the fender twin. adjust depth & rate to taste (i found that the twin sounded best with shallower, faster settings) and you’ve got it
November 15, 2009 at 4:30 pm #103767DreamhunterMemberHmmm could you give an approximate position for the symmetry knob? Is it to he left or to the right of 12/center?
November 15, 2009 at 5:30 pm #103770julianModeratorI don’t think any pedals can really nail the actual sounds of built-in tube trem. There’s a certain gain/tone alternation that each amp does that fits that amp and no other amp that’s truly wonderful. Sort of the same with tube spring reverb.
Although my main complaint against spring reverb pedals is that they don’t go crazy when you kick them.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.