Help with Dirt Transmitter Fuzz
Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2015 8:15 am
Hey y'all,
yesterday I got my new Dirt Transmitter in the mail and have been playing for hours.
It's (freakin') awesome but I've got a few issues here.
While experimenting with the settings I noticed that when I turned the Bias (and Dirt) completely or almost completely down my output signal would almost die immediately.
I know that the Bias control affects the current the transistors are fed with, but when I played some notes the most of them weren't even audible or decayed super-fast into some sort of "fart".
I compared it to demo videos on youtube where people do these kinds of extreme settings and was surprised that their tone doesn't simply die off.
For example:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTqiPJ2BeDk at 3:15
(wonderful sputtery tones without a massive decline in sustain, although it's an older version)
and
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHiQ4igBO_s at 1:45
(more splattery, but nevertheless audible).
If I turn the Bias higher than let's say 9 o'clock, my signal gets stronger again.
Also, with most of the pedals I watched being demoed the pedal still sounded pretty saturated at lower Dirt settings - mine is almost clean
but has a slight overdrive-like breakup just on top of the signal (for instance directly when I hit the strings, but it decays quickly).
(Additionally the pedal does some sort of almost quiet buzzing when the Dirt is at maximum - but it fades when it is turned just a millimeter back.)
I wonder if that's normal or some sort of manufacturing error?
Maybe the range of the controls has been increased and the pedal is now capable of even more destroyed/gated sounds and also can get cleaner?
Or is it some kind of natural variance due to the pedals being manufactured by hand?
I would love to hear if you had similar experiences or maybe if even the admin could give a statement here.
Ah, and by the way: I've only played it through a 9V battery yet because it doesn't fit on my pedalboard yet. Maybe that helps.
Thanks for your time!
Greetz and love.
yesterday I got my new Dirt Transmitter in the mail and have been playing for hours.
It's (freakin') awesome but I've got a few issues here.
While experimenting with the settings I noticed that when I turned the Bias (and Dirt) completely or almost completely down my output signal would almost die immediately.
I know that the Bias control affects the current the transistors are fed with, but when I played some notes the most of them weren't even audible or decayed super-fast into some sort of "fart".
I compared it to demo videos on youtube where people do these kinds of extreme settings and was surprised that their tone doesn't simply die off.
For example:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTqiPJ2BeDk at 3:15
(wonderful sputtery tones without a massive decline in sustain, although it's an older version)
and
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHiQ4igBO_s at 1:45
(more splattery, but nevertheless audible).
If I turn the Bias higher than let's say 9 o'clock, my signal gets stronger again.
Also, with most of the pedals I watched being demoed the pedal still sounded pretty saturated at lower Dirt settings - mine is almost clean
but has a slight overdrive-like breakup just on top of the signal (for instance directly when I hit the strings, but it decays quickly).
(Additionally the pedal does some sort of almost quiet buzzing when the Dirt is at maximum - but it fades when it is turned just a millimeter back.)
I wonder if that's normal or some sort of manufacturing error?
Maybe the range of the controls has been increased and the pedal is now capable of even more destroyed/gated sounds and also can get cleaner?
Or is it some kind of natural variance due to the pedals being manufactured by hand?
I would love to hear if you had similar experiences or maybe if even the admin could give a statement here.
Ah, and by the way: I've only played it through a 9V battery yet because it doesn't fit on my pedalboard yet. Maybe that helps.
Thanks for your time!
Greetz and love.