The NUX is NOT a 'four knob' dumble pedal clone, despite the way it looks. I have one. It sound almost exactly like all my tube screamers. Dumble pedals tend to have a wide freq range, on both ends. The NUX does not. This may not come through on the video on a phone but is very apparent in a room with a clean amp, and apparent in this video when listening with decent headphones or speakers. The NUX sounds like a standard TS, from the compression down to the low-end cut to the way the high-end comes through. It does not have the dynamics or warmth of a four-knob dumble clone. The NUX does have a bit more headroom than my other TSs, however, which is good. But the pots under the knob are the ultra cheap and fragile plastic kinds. Not a big deal if you treat your pedals as they should. If you want a decent 'typical' four-knob dumble clone, get the Joyo R-Series Tai Chi.
I respect your opinion Andrew. I have sold nearly 80 of these since it was released and I can tell you that 99% of those customers love it. However I would ask to hold off on the BS bombs please 😀
@@ThePedalGuy It's a good pedal, no doubt. Sounds great. I like the sweep of the gain knob and it's slightly increased headroom. But you can tell it's not an attempt to sound like the typical four knob d-style pedals, even in your video. Very different character to the end frequencies, and it has a noticeably more pronounced mid-hump. So maybe it's a more an attempt to sound like a three knob d-style, as Obee Sim claims in this thread. My apologies for cursing, though. Trying times in the land of freedom. I was a bit worked up. Please forgive me, brother.
Based on videos like this I have a Dw on its way to my home. I feel I might like it. Hope so...
👍
Sounds to me like the NuX is a little more articulate.
The outlaw is a thicker sound but gets to farty for me
LOL. Excellent
The NUX is NOT a 'four knob' dumble pedal clone, despite the way it looks. I have one. It sound almost exactly like all my tube screamers. Dumble pedals tend to have a wide freq range, on both ends. The NUX does not. This may not come through on the video on a phone but is very apparent in a room with a clean amp, and apparent in this video when listening with decent headphones or speakers.
The NUX sounds like a standard TS, from the compression down to the low-end cut to the way the high-end comes through. It does not have the dynamics or warmth of a four-knob dumble clone. The NUX does have a bit more headroom than my other TSs, however, which is good. But the pots under the knob are the ultra cheap and fragile plastic kinds. Not a big deal if you treat your pedals as they should.
If you want a decent 'typical' four-knob dumble clone, get the Joyo R-Series Tai Chi.
I respect your opinion Andrew. I have sold nearly 80 of these since it was released and I can tell you that 99% of those customers love it.
However I would ask to hold off on the BS bombs please 😀
Who cares, man..It sounds good..and I don't think it is a TS.
@@ThePedalGuy It's a good pedal, no doubt. Sounds great. I like the sweep of the gain knob and it's slightly increased headroom.
But you can tell it's not an attempt to sound like the typical four knob d-style pedals, even in your video. Very different character to the end frequencies, and it has a noticeably more pronounced mid-hump. So maybe it's a more an attempt to sound like a three knob d-style, as Obee Sim claims in this thread.
My apologies for cursing, though. Trying times in the land of freedom. I was a bit worked up. Please forgive me, brother.
@@AndrewLewisHowe no problem. Just trying to keep the TH-cam gods happy. 😎
nux ss is a free the tone string slinger clone