Wampler Pedals Tom Quayle Signature Dual Fusion Overdrives User Manual

Tom quayle signature dual fusion overdrives

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Tom Quayle signature Dual Fusion Overdrives.

TM

TM

Tom Quayle

When we heard that one of the forerunners of modern Fusion, Tom Quayle, was

using our pedals, it made us think – who out there caters for modern Fusion?

Sure, you can find blues pedals, country pedals, rock and metal pedals just about

any where… But no one has looked at the fastest growing genre of guitar

players… Modern Fusion.

So, we talked to Tom and listened to what he had to say about his current choice

of gain pedals (The Wampler Pedals Euphoria and the Paisley Drive), from there

we discussed how we could make them better, dare I say… Perfect?

After much backwards and forwards of ideas and theories about tone, switching

and stacking, we found that we could in fact make a pedal that suited Tom, was

perfect for modern Fusion and also for just about everyone else who loves great

tone, clarity and versatility.

Modern fusion is a light year away from tradition jazz or fusion. Taking the

theoretical approach and knowledge and then adding a healthy amount of rock

and shred, modern fusion players need a more “gainy” tone – gain that has to

give them the power they need but it also has to leave room for the clarity of

expression... especially when working at extremely high intensity.

So, we took the core sounds Tom loves from the Euphoria and the Paisley,

modified them so they work together perfectly, gave them a couple of extra

special Brian tweeks – especially when stacked – then put them together to make

the Dual Fusion, a milestone in tone for modern Fusion, and just about every

other style that needs amazing, transparent overdrive.

To get the most out of your new pedal, you'll want to become very familiar with the controls. The Dual Fusion drive features 2

independent channels, each with three adjustment knobs and 1 switch that allows for a great deal of flexibility. With a brighter

single coil guitar, you can get anything from fuller cleans to some seriously powerful drive. With a more aggressive instrument,

there's enough dirt on tap to get into a fully saturated tone. Regardless of your gain needs, the EQ flexibility and tonal palette of

this pedal is stunning! We'll go over each control in detail, and cover some suggestions that will give you a great tone so you

don't have to start from scratch (unless you want to that is!).

Bypass Switches – Simple enough, these footswitches are wired up for true bypass switching to ensure that you don't have

anything in the way when you disable either channel. Stomp on each channel's respective footswitch to turn the pedal on, and

the LED indicator light will show that it's active. C1 (Vintage) has a blue LED indicator light, C2 (Modern) has a red LED indicator

light. When both channels are on, so are both LEDs.

Volumes – These control the output of the each channel. They work just like the volume knob on your guitar or your amp. As you

raise the Gain knob, and depending on how you adjust the Tone control and switches, you may need to raise or lower them to

have the same output level. That's perfectly normal. Whether you prefer a boost when you kick your overdrive on or just about

the same level as your clean tone, there should be enough range of adjustment to suit all tastes. This isn’t a hugely loud pedal, so

if you're using a very high output guitar, you might need to raise the volume fairly high – again, that's normal, so long as the

pedal can hit unity gain (same level when you kick it on as when it's bypassed) it's behaving as expected.

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