Delay
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Mooer Ocean Machine II
€ 269 Add to cart -
Caroline Guitar Company Kilobyte 2000
€ 339 Add to cart -
Old Blood Noise Endeavors Black Fountain Stereo Delay
€ 349 Select options This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page -
Benson Deep Sea Diver Fuzz-Echo
€ 299 Add to cart -
Matthews Effects The Technician
€ 489 Add to cart -
Strymon EC-1 Tape Echo
€ 319 Add to cart -
JHS 3S Tape Delay
€ 126 Add to cart -
JHS 3S Oil Can Delay
€ 126 Add to cart -
Keeley Halo Core
€ 389 Add to cart -
Free The Tone Cosmic Wave CW-1Y
€ 299 Add to cart -
Universal Audio Starlight Echo Station
€ 389 Add to cart -
Universal Audio Del-Verb Ambience Companion
€ 339 Add to cart
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Delay pedal
Tape, analog or digital delay
Delays come in three flavors: magnetic (tape), analog, and digital. Magnetic ones are (almost) not available in pedal format. However, there are plenty of analog and digital ones. An analog delay pedal consists of an electronic circuit in which the original signal is delayed and repeated. It often uses so-called Bucket Brigade Chips. The sound quality of this is slightly less good than that of a magnetic delay. In particular, there is a loss in the high tones, these are repeated less well. Nowadays, however, this typical warm sound is often a plus of the analog delay.
Early days
The digital delay pedal was developed in the 1980s. In the early days it sounded poor, nowadays the sound quality is good to very good. With a digital version you get an almost exact repetition of the original guitar signal. Another advantage over an analog pedal is the somewhat longer times that you have at your disposal.
Settings
On each pedal you can set the time, number of repetitions and volume. In addition, you can change the timbre of the repeats and set the type on digital pedals. Sometimes there are also options to set modulation. The range of an analog pedal is often a maximum of about 500 milliseconds, while a digital pedal has up to a full second (1000 ms) of delay time. Analogue pedals from Chase Bliss can also be controlled with MIDI and have many additional options.