Pop Corner
Pop Corner

Jonny Rock Gear

Pop Corner

Sale price$180.00 CAD
Style:White
Quantity:
Pickup available at GUP Tech shop Usually ready in 24 hours

Pop Corner

White

GUP Tech shop

Pickup available, usually ready in 24 hours

6182 Boulevard Talbot
Saguenay QC G7N 1W1
Canada

+14188174291
In stock

The "Pop Corner" won't be the all around main overdrive of your pedalboard because there's much more attitude and character to take out of it.

Its unique sound is certainly due to its circuitry designed by ears. We tried to forget electronic laws while prototyping and just let the mojo flow through our feelings. We were looking at something versatile from light driven blues to modern rock where you can also find some hard funk and squashed grunge tones in between. On top of it, the "Pop Corner" cleans perfectly as you turn down your guitar volume pot.

Add it some "Butter" and "Salt" to your taste !

See Quickstart here.

Specifications:

  • True bypass design

  • DC output w/negative center compatible w/std 9V AC adaptor

  • 5 mm LED indicator

  • From Hard Funk to Heavy Rock overdriven tones

  • From very open to extremely squashed tones

 

Controls:

  • Size (volume), Butter (gain), and Salt (tone)

  • Switch: compression (on/off) - More Clipping

 

Demo :

Customer Reviews

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I
Ian G
Never played a drive pedal like it.

Perfect for people that like having unique drive pedals to shape different tones. If I want "normal" overdriven sounds I typically just crank the amp up, I like when a pedal has distinct tonal characteristics. With the size low and just a little bit of salt and butter it can be pretty open and natural sounding. The extra clipping compression can get a sound almost like hitting a compressor with a lot of input gain. The size which feels almost like an input gain can take you anywhere from a nice drive sound that could work with a lot of things to very unique , almost fuzzy overdrive sounds. The switch for extra clipping compression is the key to the fuzzy characteristics. With more tame settings you can push a sound without a ton of gain into saturation. Cranking things up creates massive sounds.

The controls interact beautifully. I think it's for the best they don't have typical labeling and force you to use your ears to shape the sound. The salt and butter play off each other to let you get the right amount of saturation in the lows and highs. With hollow body guitars I can get a slight fuzzy edge to chords that nothing else has been able to do quite right. Brighter guitars kind of push it into saturation rather than just getting too bright. The more low end the guitar has, the more blown out and fuzzy it gets. Different pickups create wildly different sounds, the volume and tone of your guitar also play a big factor. You can get a whole range of gain just by using the volume of your guitar. It's really something you have to play and feel for yourself.