Re: Anyone want to reverse-engineer a Tone Monk Seed of Life
Posted: 21 Jan 2012, 19:35
Wow. That is just plain amazing. And by amazing I mean a total bitch-ass move.


tracing pedals since 2007
https://www.freestompboxes.org/

Damn, you are spot on! I just compared my pedal with the GGG TS PCB & component layout and everywhere I can see a component or wire on the PCB, it matches.Burglar wrote:Even though it's gooped, it's easy to see that it's built with a TS board from GGG
there you go:MarkF786 wrote:I remember seeing a gut shot of his Phoenix (Klone) which is also gooped and remember thinking it looked like the Madbean PCB; obviously, why else would you goop a Klone unless you had something to hide? I'll try to track down a the gut shot to confirm.

There's no need to dig into that. I just did some checking and put two and two together. I now know that it MUST be the Sunking PCB that's being used on the Phoenix. I'll post some more details soon but needless to say this was done very under-handily and I am pretty f'n furious right now.Seiche wrote:there you go:MarkF786 wrote:I remember seeing a gut shot of his Phoenix (Klone) which is also gooped and remember thinking it looked like the Madbean PCB; obviously, why else would you goop a Klone unless you had something to hide? I'll try to track down a the gut shot to confirm.
from the gutshot thread at TGP
aaaaaand bingo. what fucking a fucking tool.
I was offered one in a trade last month for a Klone I built. I found a gut shot pic and thought it was pretty funny. I didn't pay much attention to it since I was just going to flip the pedal anyway. Trade ended up not happening.phibes wrote:I can't believe it took so long to notice it was a GGG board!!! We must be thinking that nobody's doing that anymore...
yeah that sucks big time. You can see under the goop that the caps are in the same places etc.madbean wrote:There's no need to dig into that. I just did some checking and put two and two together. I now know that it MUST be the Sunking PCB that's being used on the Phoenix. I'll post some more details soon but needless to say this was done very under-handily and I am pretty f'n furious right now.
why? they look sturdy, but also really bulky. I've never used one, but i wouldn't buy them because they are usually more expensive and take up too much room.Skreddy wrote:The thing that bugs me the most about that Klone gutshot is the X-wing footswitch. Gawd those are crap.
I knew about the Phoenix and about Tone Monk, but I did not know that the Sunking PCB was being used until I found out who owns Tone Monk and where they are located (which happened just now). I should have realized this earlier, but it just wasn't on my radar.Seiche wrote:yeah that sucks big time. You can see under the goop that the caps are in the same places etc.madbean wrote:There's no need to dig into that. I just did some checking and put two and two together. I now know that it MUST be the Sunking PCB that's being used on the Phoenix. I'll post some more details soon but needless to say this was done very under-handily and I am pretty f'n furious right now.
Have you known about this before this thread?
"... There are several features in the circuit of the SOL that allow you to actually shape your tone in ways you have never done before. The 3-way texture switch offers an array of saturations from transparent to colored tube driven qualities. The Form EQ control allows you to roll off high end frequencies at half the rate that accentuates low-mid frequencies, in reaction to the texture you choose, to 'form' your overall tone. The drive control works as gain drive saturation. The input control changes your input gain from unity gain to +10db over unity providing incredible clean boosting capabilities..."Burglar wrote:phibes wrote:I just think it's hilarious reading the sales pitch and descriptions of these things. Like they opened a portal to a secret universe or something.
symmetrical mathematics...MarkF786 wrote:"... There are several features in the circuit of the SOL that allow you to actually shape your tone in ways you have never done before. The 3-way texture switch offers an array of saturations from transparent to colored tube driven qualities. The Form EQ control allows you to roll off high end frequencies at half the rate that accentuates low-mid frequencies, in reaction to the texture you choose, to 'form' your overall tone. The drive control works as gain drive saturation. The input control changes your input gain from unity gain to +10db over unity providing incredible clean boosting capabilities..."Burglar wrote:phibes wrote:I just think it's hilarious reading the sales pitch and descriptions of these things. Like they opened a portal to a secret universe or something.
"Though the basis of my background ranges from Sacred Geometry to Physics, I am a music lover first. With Tone Monk Custom Boutique Electronics, I strive to incorporate this love for music along with symmetrical mathematics and the science of electron paths to bring unique products to the boutique realm".
And from the FAQ: "Do you build Clones or Kits?" - "Contrary to what you may have heard- We will not and do not build "clones" or "kits"."
LMAO.
I'm glad I bought the pedal used on the cheap. It's actually not a bad YATS.
The are weak and cheap and primitive, which you'd know if you had ever used one. Overheat or even look at it sideways, and it fails.Seiche wrote:why? they look sturdy, but also really bulky. I've never used one, but i wouldn't buy them because they are usually more expensive and take up too much room.Skreddy wrote:The thing that bugs me the most about that Klone gutshot is the X-wing footswitch. Gawd those are crap.
Agreed. The old late 90's black big muffs used them and everyone I knew that used them, had at least an extra two or three of them with broken switches. They were like 20 bucks a piece at most music stores so nobody figured it was worth fixing a 20 dollar pedal back then.Skreddy wrote:The are weak and cheap and primitive, which you'd know if you had ever used one. Overheat or even look at it sideways, and it fails.Seiche wrote:why? they look sturdy, but also really bulky. I've never used one, but i wouldn't buy them because they are usually more expensive and take up too much room.Skreddy wrote:The thing that bugs me the most about that Klone gutshot is the X-wing footswitch. Gawd those are crap.
What a bullshitter..MarkF786 wrote:"... There are several features in the circuit of the SOL that allow you to actually shape your tone in ways you have never done before. The 3-way texture switch offers an array of saturations from transparent to colored tube driven qualities. The Form EQ control allows you to roll off high end frequencies at half the rate that accentuates low-mid frequencies, in reaction to the texture you choose, to 'form' your overall tone. The drive control works as gain drive saturation. The input control changes your input gain from unity gain to +10db over unity providing incredible clean boosting capabilities..."Burglar wrote:phibes wrote:I just think it's hilarious reading the sales pitch and descriptions of these things. Like they opened a portal to a secret universe or something.
"Though the basis of my background ranges from Sacred Geometry to Physics, I am a music lover first. With Tone Monk Custom Boutique Electronics, I strive to incorporate this love for music along with symmetrical mathematics and the science of electron paths to bring unique products to the boutique realm".
And from the FAQ: "Do you build Clones or Kits?" - "Contrary to what you may have heard- We will not and do not build "clones" or "kits"."