Foxrox Wah Retrofit

What is it? The Foxrox Wah Retrofit is a specially
tuned buffer-amp that is encased in heat shrink, with a volume
control and four wires coming out of it (ground, voltage, input,
output). It gets installed into your Wah Wah pedal, giving it
the ability to retain its' entire sweep when driving the input
of a Fuzz Face, or Fuzz Face clone. The Foxrox Wah Retrofit is
basically a FET preamp that is perfectly suited to handle guitar
signals. It can also be used to add additional output to effects
that are weak, it can be installed into it's own box and used
as a clean boost, or in a guitar as an on-board preamp. But it's
main application is to allow the Wah pedal to retain it's full
sweep when driving a Fuzz Face.
The Problem - It's a problem that's been around
as long as Wah Wah pedals and Fuzz Faces. Here's the scenario:
You take your Wah Wah pedal and you plug it into a Fuzz Face (or
Fuzz Face clone). Alone, each one sounds great, but when you try
to use both the Wah and the Fuzz at the same time, it just isn't
happening. In some cases (like with most germanium fuzz's), you
get almost no sweep from the Wah Wah pedal. In other cases (like
with most silicon fuzz's), you get a loud oscillation that goes
up and down in frequency as you move the pedal.
Why it happens - Without getting into a lengthy discussion
about electronic circuitry, here's a brief explanation of why
this happens:
- Wah pedals - Most inductor-based Wah Wah pedals
use the same basic circuit. This includes VOX, Thomas Organ,
Jen, Dunlop, and many of the newer boutique Wah pedals such as
Teese, Fulltone, Buddha, etc.. Of course, there are many modifications
and different quality parts used in these pedals which makes
them all unique, but essentially they all adhere the same basic
circuit topology. The classic inductor-based Wah circuit has
an output stage that is not particularly well suited to drive
a load. If the output is loaded down, the result is a very narrow
sweep, the low end of the sweep pretty much disappears. While
most effects don't load down the signal enough to cause a problem,
there's one big exception - the Fuzz Face.
- FuzzFace - The FuzzFace is notorious for having
a very low input impedance. It's so low that it's actually the
first guitar effect (that I know of) to feature true bypass.
Yes - back in 1966, the designers of the FuzzFace realized that
true bypass was required or else the input of the FuzzFace would
severely degrade the guitar signal when the effect was bypassed.
- The Wah + Fuzz Face
combination - So
when you take a Wah Wah pedal, and plug it into a Fuzz Face,
and kick them in at the same time, you're creating the scenario.
You have an effect (the Wah) that can't drive a load very well,
and you're connecting it directly to the effect (the Fuzz Face)
that has the biggest load of all. The result - with low gain
Fuzz's, mostly germanium, you get almost no range from the Wah.
With high gain Fuzz's, mostly silicon, you get almost no range,
along with a howl that changes in frequency as you rock the pedal
up and down.
Remedies - In order to avoid this scenario from
happening, there are a number of things you can do , but unfortunately
they all have drawbacks. Here's a list of things that come to
mind:
- Put the Wah after the Fuzz,
not before. The problem here is that you end up with a very intense
Wah sound, which can be very shrill and deafening to most people.
While some people have gotten good results from this, most agree
that it's a pretty lousy sound.
- Put a "clean boost"
or "buffer" type of pedal between the Wah and the Fuzz.
This cures the problem, but it creates a new one. You see, the
Fuzz Face works best with no active circuitry between it, and
your guitar's pickups. Any type of active buffer will kill much
of the FuzzFace tone and make it sound more like a regular distortion
pedal. It also affects the ability to "clean up" the
fuzz by rolling back the volume knob on your guitar, one of the
greatest features of the FuzzFace.
- Put a resistor at the input
of the FuzzFace to increase its input impedance. This helps to
minimize the problem, returning much of the Wah's range and preventing
oscillation. This is probably the best of the three remedies
listed. But there's one considerable draw back - it takes away
from the intensity and sustain of the Fuzz by cutting the input
signal. Note - The Foxrox FuzzFoot (part of Captain Coconut and
Captain Coconut 2) includes an on-board trimmer potentiometer
for using this approach to getting the Wah Wah pedal to sound
good with the Fuzz.
The ULTIMATE REMEDY
The best way to prevent this problem is to install the Foxrox
Wah Retrofit into your Wah Wah pedal, essentially adding a
new, better output stage. By installing it in the pedal, it is
switched into the signal path only when the Wah is engaged. This
prevents it from affecting the Fuzz when the Wah is switched out,
while giving the Wah the ability to drive any load - even that
of the notorious FuzzFace. The result is a nice, wide sweep, just
as wide as when the Fuzz isn't in the signal path
and no
oscillation even with the highest gain fuzz pedals.
Finally, a way to get your
favorite Wah Wah pedal to sound great with your favorite Fuzz
Face, with no side effects at all.