From the manufacturers -site:
Based on a CMOS chip, the Flamingo provides a gritty, tube-like overdrive/fuzz with plenty of bottom end fat .
....
Also this overdrive/fuzz has been known to sound similar to a popular mammal overdrive that is no longer in production, but that is best left for you to decide.
CMos-chip, Tube-like, Mammal (or LLama ?)....time to have a look inside this clone:
A came across a Sirkut Ring modulator on ebay: it looked like this:
And we know that if there is a review on Harmony Central, that the pedal really exists, no :wink: ?
The Sirkut Electornics R-MOD is not your standard, run-of-the-mill ring modulation effect. Part of the fun is figuring out how to tame the carrier wave bleedthrough. (...) This pedal was designed for one thing ... pure unadulterated noise. It constantly self-oscillates at whatever pitch setting is chosen and can transform a...
For what it's worth... series/parallel arrangement seems obvious, but Rhino+Llame?
The Camel Toe is a Green Rhino and Red Llama rolled into one pedal with separate controls for each pedal, a true bypass switch, an overdrive selector switch and a series parallel switch. In parallel mode you can select between the Green Rhino circuit and the Red Llama circuit. Series combines the two for complete overdrive chaos. In addition, if you open the back of the pedal Mr. Huge has several trim pots to...
I know a few have surfaced here and there and that most if not all the pedals were tweaked versions of existing designs. Other than the Red Llama and Swollen Pickle, has anyone come across anything else?
Because E-bow failed, I disintegrated.
The inside was strengthened with resin.
I used the hammer to take off the resin.
Because I took it off violently, I have lost the numerical value of each part.
I am sorry in strange English.
Will you serve as a reference?
Some gut shots, good sounding but ... many cold solder joint. Olaf is not nice vendor, it does not answer on mails notorious. We waited on package over 4 months.
This one has been my main overdrive for years.
It's not so popular and not as fantastic as some boutique pedals I really digged on but strangely this plain sounding pedal used to be the only keeper for me.
Does anyone know what circuit it's based on?
I don't know why I didn't take a closer look when I had it.
Its controls are quite self-explainatory by the way.
Jun
I saw this the other day and the thing that struck me most was the switching system.
I really liked it.
How can you do that, diy-speaking?
I went to GEO, but found nothing.
Anyone have the schematic? I heard it was the same as the Tennesee ShoSound version.
I did some work with this guy He bought and registered the BossTone name a year or 2 ago.
Seemed like a nice guy with big dreams but he doesn't know sh*t about electronics didn't know how to wire the stomp switch up etc.
Wonder if he's using one of my pcb's?
If anyone gets a chance please take a peek for me!
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