Z.Vex Effects

Z.Vex Effects is a boutique effects pedal company based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Their name derives from the name of founder Zachary Vex. The company's most famous product is the Fuzz Factory. All of their pedals (except the budget-line Vexter series) are hand painted at their factory in Minnesota. All Vexter subassemblies are made in Taiwan, but the final assembly is completed in the United States. Their products tend to be high-end and handmade, thus are rather expensive. Z.Vex effects pedals are known for the extreme amount of control that they give to the user. According to Zack Vex, all handpainted pedals are "warranted to be free from manufacturing defects for as long as I am on the planet."[1]

Contents

Products

  • Fuzz Factory (fuzzbox)
  • Box of Rock (preamp-booster/overdrive)
  • Box of Metal (high gain distortion)
  • Woolly Mammoth (bass/guitar fuzzbox)
  • Super Hard-On (preamp-booster/overdrive)
  • Super Duper 2-in-1 (preamp/overdrive)
  • Machine (fuzzbox)
  • Ooh Wah II (step-sequenced filter)
  • Ringtone (step-sequenced ring modulator)
  • Lo-Fi Loop Junky (analog looper)
  • Seek Wah II (step-sequenced filter)
  • Octane III (octave-generating fuzzbox)
  • Seek Trem (step-sequenced tremolo)
  • Tremorama (step-sequenced tremolo)
  • Jonny Octave (octave)
  • Wah Probe
  • Fuzz Probe
  • Trem Probe
  • The Nano Head (tube amplifier)
  • The iMPAMP
  • Distortron
  • Mastotron
  • Drip Guitar (discontinued)
  • Volume Probe (discontinued)

Notable users

Other products

The company also manufactures a Probe line of effects (the Fuzz Probe, Wah Probe and Tremolo Probe) that are modified versions of other pedals the company makes. What makes this series of pedals unique is the copper plate, which has an antenna underneath it that senses how close your foot (or something else) is to the pedal, giving you the ability to manipulate an aspect of the pedal's sound. From the company's website:

"The probe circuit generates a small (one or two inches high) 'bubble' of RF energy at about a million cycles per second above the copper plate. As your foot or hand (or any wet or metallic object, for that matter) approaches the copper plate, the RF field is disturbed and the circuit reacts by increasing the brightness of an LED, which drives a photoresistive cell and controls the circuit."[2]

References

  1. ^ zvex.com :: View topic - AC-DC

External links