I think it’s a fun gimmick that gets you a little more involved with your pedal without needing any skill. It’s cheaper than any other Klon kit out there as well. For a Klone that’s exactly like the real thing sound wise, it’s priced really well.
I really dont care for JHS or this specific pedal but we have to recognize that there’s a significant added cost to JHS when they decide to have all the extra packaging needed to sell this kit. Extra large box, anti-static bag, more complex pcb with special tools precut in it. Etc etc. I find the 99 price tag to be reasonable
I couldn’t imagine making a whole video about this subject and not even mentioning this. Or the fact that Korg have also released solderless pedal kits. JHS even did a video about it this year. My honest guess is he liked that idea and also did it. I think this video is a little bit just making a video to make a video territory. He didn’t really make any solid points, just a lot of speculation.
Not to mention the hours of R&D required to make it a kit. The design approach would be much different from a standard JHS product, and that costs money too.
Yeah, I gotta agree with the others. The price is incredibly reasonable for the pedal even with having to assemble it. The ikea schtick is hilariously clever and the end result is a great klon clone.
@@rethardotv5874in my experience JHS have great customer service. I don’t see them hanging anyone out to dry, they’ve never operated like that. The Op just has whinge as a default mode.
Nope, it's not reasonable price, maybe the box costs could make it more reasonable but in general whole guitar gear industry is overpriced solely because people are willing to pay way too much. Btw. It is the same case for other instruments too, though with acoustic ones the build quality somewhat matters
It’s just supposed to be a fun project. I don’t think 99 dollars is a lot to ask. I love this channel but I don’t think these points really matter for this product. And given many USA pedals are simply assembled in the US now and not even soldered in house I don’t think there’s any really trickery on their part. Even Walrus boxes say “assembled” not “built” in the USA. It’s cheaper to have parts surface mounted and not thru hole soldered.
I don't think you should see it as "trickery" per say. Rather just think about how influential JHS is (Bad Monkey fiasco) and how well this product is doing. People need to be at least a bit skeptical or else every other company will start doing it. Plus no return policy for something that can be just as easily disassembled as it was assembled doesn't sit right with me.
@PuttinOnTheRiffs, You didn't even mention KDHs' main issue with this, which was the non return policy, and likely lesser warranty protection for the same price as a 3 series pedal.
@@castleanthrax1833 idk about this being really an issue and more of an observation and a comparison. If you buy any other build your own you cannot return it unless it’s missing parts. How would the return policy work on a product like this and how would jhs be able to resell this product after the fact? As “returned and assembled?” Would it even be work $100 at that point? There’s really no way to do it that I can think of. Given the overhead of a company like jhs, the number of employees, they probably offer insurances to all of them, the already finished enclosure and the unique design idea I was shocked it wasn’t $120+ and personally I’d buy it at that price. Yes, it’s a simple finish but it’s still a cost to powder coat white and print on them. It’s positioned well in the market in the grand scheme.
@@CoolGuyAtlas I feel that. But it’s just a project and all other companies (BYOC, pedalparts, stew Mac) have similar policies on their builds. It’s very standard.
I think this actually goes back to Josh and Bill Finnegan. Bill didn’t like Josh making a clone of his pedal and at the time Bill wasn’t making any. Josh told Bill that when Bill started making Klons again, Josh would stop making his clone. A promise he kept. Fast forward ten years and now there are hundreds of klones by different brands. People have asked JHS for years to bring back their klone, but as Josh mentioned in a Q&A a few years ago, Bill won’t respond to tell him if he’s ok with Josh making a klone again. So my first thought when I saw the video for the release was ‘haha, technically he’s not making it.’ That’s my honest guess on why they did it this way. And I don’t disagree with KDHs assessment that they probably could have released this fully built, with a warranty, for the same price. But Josh did mention cheaper and equally priced alternatives in his video if you aren’t interested in ‘building’ one of your own.
I have never met Josh and only know him from his videos but the impression I get form his videos is that you could be 100% correct and if you are it would be hilarious and give us yet another reason to love JHS. KDH overlooks the fact that this concept is fun and allows one to learn something new even if it is of limited application. We live in a world where less and less of us ever do something with our hands besides type on a keyboard and something like this would be go for a lot of us. In a Capitalist country Josh gets to charge whatever he wants for his pedals and make and sell them however he wises. It is the consumer who decides if it what Josh did was a good move. The consumer has spoken. I enjoy the videos of KDH but think he is wrong on this one.
Exactly correct. He promised to not build a klon. So he lets the customer "build" a "notaklön" in the easiest way possible to keep his promise in this way of argument.
Not only in that marketing video, but if look in the JHS archive, they did a live-stream (1h30m or so??) devoted to Klon clones, down to almost the cheapest of the cheap ($35, I think, for the cheapest they did in *that* video). The message being that they ALL could be made to sound indistinguishable from the original. Meanwhile, KDH's points stand, of course. :)
That's just taking advantage of a technicality to make money though. Just a shrewd business move and a disregard for the spirit of the verbal agreement. End of the day I really don't care but if what you say is true that's all it is. Like KDH says the entire pedal market is derivative of itself. Nearly every pedal has at least 15 clones aside from some of the super esoteric ones.
1. It's very reasonably priced 2. Assembly is part of the fun 3. The design and packaging for this kit almost certainly costs more than the labor savings of assembly
The ability to “say you built a pedal” you don’t think there’s a bunch of kids that are going to get into pedal building because of this? You really don’t see any inherent value from an educational or pedal cultural perspective? It’s brilliant and affordable on every front and of course marketing gold. But I really think you’re truly underestimating the educational value.
Running out of "gotcha" topics? Don't worry KDH, someone will screw up again soon. This is just a fun pedal. You're definitely looking to hard at this.
Putting it together is part of the fun. Plus the whole goop thing adds a novelty to it. I think it’s a good way to introduce people to DIY pedal making. It’s like saying you shouldn’t get a Lego car cuz you can get a normal toy car for cheaper. My only problem has nothing to do with JHS or the kit itself, I’m just annoyed people are already trying to scalp these for more than double the price. If you’re scalping a solderless diy pedal kit you’re what’s wrong with the guitar market.
Yeah, I agree. I have the StewMac Ghost Drive, and it was fun to put together. It also gives you a little kick of pride that you made the thing. But that's my skill level and the amount of time I'm willing to put in it. Others might think that's pointless, and the only way to actually feel like you made the pedal is to design and etch the PCB and make the enclosure from scratch. And for others, soldering itself is out of the question, so a kit like this one from JHS is enough to give them that kick. It's nice that we have options, because, yes, the feeling of making the thing yourself, no matter your skill level or the amount of effort you're willing to spend, does matter a lot.
I like your videos and like your opinions on most all things guitar related. But I'm not sure about your take on this one. I build my own pedals and have even built quite a few amplifiers from scratch. I have also built several Klon clone pedals. However I really like and applaud what JHS are doing here. Offering a DIY introductory product like is brilliant, and I think will only increase the number of DIYers out there. JHS are doing a great job of offering a product that is both a great sounding pedal and also a gateway into the DIY community. I think this is awesome. Some kid will buy this pedal kit , become inspired, and will eventually go on to become the next Leo Fender or Jim Marshall, etc. Please don't hate on this. The notaklon is a fantastic idea and props to JHS for understanding this and taking full advantage of it.
Agreed - the whole subtext from JHS of the DIY element of this pedal is to emphasise that there is no great "magic or "mystery" to guitar pedals, by getting consumers to really engage with what's inside their pedals. Let's face it, 95% of the appeal of effects pedals are kooky names, fun graphics and some twisty knobs and switches, rather than their tonal characteristics....which most of us get bored with after a short while anyway (hence massive used market). If this demystifies and encourages people to have a go at building or modding their own, then that's a great thing. I ordered a notaklon last night (wont get it until April!) purely to show my support to JHS (we need more authentic companies like them with something to say).
Yep! This is just a bit of fun. The minimal assembly really is just part of the joke, and I agree it’s likely a gateway for more builders to emerge. We need more projects like this.
Stew Mac DIY pedals cost more than these..... $99 is pretty dang cheap. I specifically wanted to build a pedal myself, so this looks perfect. I'm digging it man. Zero complaints from a pretty picky guy as far as knowing what I bought and being happy for what they are asking. Haven't even gotten it in yet.
Bah Humbug! It’s fun to put it together with a young kid or guitar student. They get to see the insides and maybe get excited about playing. I’d pay extra for a boss pedal that does this for the same reason.
I don’t think it’s just a PR exercise. It’s more than that. It’s fun, it’s getting people into pedals in a new way and gave people the JHS Klon what they wanted.
Spit on!!! We are about to wake up. Like in the 70’s looking back at 50’s TV marketing. 🙈It’s marketing. Making people feel Good about buying stuff. That’s all it is.
Wearing a $3000 LV sweater-- thats a novelty. This is an extremely practical and well priced tool, as are many JHS pedals in my professional experience as a guitarist
I ordered 3 of them for my sons and I to assemble as a fun project. I don’t buy many expensive pedals but if I did Josh and the good folks at JHS would get my money. He is the one guy who makes more videos praising the competition than his own products.
Well said! I will support and continue to support JHS. The 3-series pedals are quality sounding and reliable. A way better value at $99 than the noisy, low QC (and sometimes horrible sounding) $30 mini pedals you get from Amazon Basics or Donner. I own and use (and love) the Bad Monkey pedal as my main OD. I have been meaning for a couple of years to pick another one up because they are so good and so inexpensive. Then Josh does his video about them and they shot up to $500! 🤯🤬 I don’t blame Josh though. I’ll just wait till they are forgotten again by the lemmings of the guitar world.
Other companies can try, but part of JHS’ success is their marketing ability, not many companies can replicate that. Also, feels a bit odd to assume that this pedal would have been 99 even if it came fully assembled
@@CyberneticArgumentCreator Agree. His schtick is contrarian-take-on-popular-or-topical-theme-of-the-day, and his take on this pedal is pretty ignorant.
@@CyberneticArgumentCreator Bollocks - assembly of this product in the US would cost about $3 per unit and in the far east $1 a unit, including overheads. If it wasn't designed for self assembly, it would cost about $10 less anyway, wouldn't be as large, and would use less resources and materials.
Low price, great quality sound (for the price), really accessible and affordable entry point for customers thinking about getting into pedal-building. I think this video forgets the market entirely, it's not meant for experienced pedal builders, it's to lower the entry point into that world - not to redefine what it is to "build a pedal." This isn't a "step back or regression" as KDH says, there's nothing forcing people who want to build more expensive pedals from still building more expensive pedals. This whole thing feels like gear snobbery, I think what JHS is doing is a great initiative for newcomers, and we shouldn't be gatekeeping them.
He takes issue that the return policy is different than that of a normal pre-assembled pedal and feels you’re essentially being duped into doing something “tedious” in building it. There. Saved you 9 minutes and 45 seconds.
I don't really get your point. It's more of a gimmick than an actual "cheaper because you build it yourself" item. Hence the IKEA inspired name. ALL pedals cost insanely more than their build price, especially the boutique ones. So.... What ?
I think the point is more about the loss of warranty protection than anyone spending $99 and you put it together. In the end, the DIY aspect is just fun, but, because YOU are responsible for the assembly and if you make a mess of it, you're on your own. It's a small risk, one that I would take with no worries. I don't even think the biggest issue was with the warranty, but that copy-cats will start doing this more often.
@montyrayza7220 no need to be an ass. Get back to your eat the rich wankery now. I've literally NEVER had to use a warranty on a pedal in 20+ years of playing. You guys are really reaching here to find anything dramatic, and I'm starting to think it's more just to get hits and clicks off the coattails of a trending item, rather than a genuine warning.
@@Eric_01 There's no loss of warranty protection. Only loss of return policy, which makes sense since the build process involves steps that can't be undone.
Categorically. It’s not a crime in any way for a business t make a product that’s compelling to its customer base and then sell A LOT of that product. That’s the idea of business. I think pointing out how many sold how quickly they did is just pointing out the creative prowess of the people at JHS. This idea that for some reason musical equipment businesses shouldn’t enjoy success commercially being shared by a TH-cam channel who’s success comes from whether people watch it or not is not reasonable. Pot Kettle like. Creatively JHS has the best and most Genuine brand out there for me. The he quality of the record recommendations says that comprehensively as far as I’m concerned. Identifying this opportunity is just an extension of that. JHS are exactly what a pedal brand should be. I’m really stocked that another Irish channel has done as well as you have KDH. And I really enjoyed your interview with the wampler lads. So respect to you man. But your content is not for me.
I have appreciated your calling out bullshit of different companies over the years (example: Andertons) but criticizing the $99 cost for a really novel experience is really pushing it. Imagine how many kids are going to get a chance to assemble this who don't (yet) have soldering skills or access to tools? If they sell say 50,000 of these by the time this is all said and done, imagine how many people who had a chance to put this together might catch the "building stuff is fun" bug?
I think JHS is taking the piss - by involving the customer in the DIY process of “building” and “gooping” they’re mocking the Klon market. I love it. And I think they’re uniquely positioned as a brand to pull something like this off…. Can’t wait to see what’s next from them. (I don’t own any JHS pedals)
I enjoy your channel kdh but this was a massive stretch of a video and it felt like it too, felt like a lot of yatta yatta for a weak argument in the end. I'm not a jhs fan boy, I think this is a cute product, I don't think the price or the lack of warranty is a big deal at all. In fact I'd be willing to bet money that if you had a problem with a notaklon they would be very helpful, that's been my experience with several American pedal brands, they don't have to be as helpful as they are
I think you missed a point here. To make the pedal easy to put together for the consumer, JHS would have constructed this pedal differently to say the 3 series. There is still labour involved from JHS to print the circuit board and attach the quick connect ribbon parts, which I doubt would be in other pedals. Like you said, the majority of the pedal is already built, plus there's the extra parts added so the customer can construct it, specifically the ribbon attachment.
Mine's being delivered tomorrow. Im not fussed about the warranty and frankly i dont really need another Klon clone, but the marketing was great, as is the ikea design concept. Its a bit of fun and i'm happy to support companies I like that make great products. It was only $99, which is only the same price as a cup of coffee. My only regret is that i didnt buy two.
@@montyrayza7220 haha yeah they bought a recreation of a legendary pedal for under $100 that they will enjoy assembling that will give them a long time of satisfaction, and it will sound great, what a sucker! /s
@@montyrayza7220 Damn, because of your comment, now I feel like a sucker because I bought a product that I liked with money I can afford. For the record, 21 babies are born every minute and you need to lighten up.
I have a 5 year old who loves to do everything I do. He lacks the soldering skills and patience to complete pedals,so I try to simplify them for him. This is someone else’s version of what I do for my son. I ordered one for him immediately and am excited for him to build it. Kids (of all ages) love projects and having more immediate gratification.
I don't mind the Notaklon being 99 dollars as I assumed that the price was because of the fun IKEA branding and all of the design work that went into it, and to your point about more clones coming out and mimicking the Notaklon, I seriously don't think that will be a problem, because once again the key selling point of the Notaklon, the IKEA aesthetic which will get old fast.. People will stop buying it, and JHS as a brand, which is something literally no other pedal company has.
When i heard it was no-solder my first thought was "has he developed a 2-pack solder paste?" Because honestly building a klon from a box of parts and a pcb is so unbelievably piss easy the only issue i could see is access to a soldering iron. I was very disapointed to see it was just two boards that clip together because it could have been a great opportunity to show people how simple these devices are and how they dont really need to be spending their money on stuff like clean boosts, overdrives, fuzz, simple delay lines etc etc.
@@mrrootytooty5797 while I agree in principle with your argument, yes making these pedals yourself is easy and cheep, I work as a computer engineer and the first thing I learned is that people just don’t care and will spend asinine amounts in order to not have to learn anything or do anything themselves. The notaklon serves this exact purpose it’s a fun well designed “diy” pedal that makes people think they are crafty without actually alienating anyone or making them work
@@mrrootytooty5797I think many people have money and like spending it. While those that want to cheap out will certainly find all these TH-cam videos about cheap pedals. So I think the only buyers of expensive pedals these days are those that just want to buy something expensive.
@@FalconiusIt's amazing how much money people will spend just to remain ignorant. I say this as someone who is smart enough to realize how stupid they are 😀
Although I am not a big JHS fan, and I do build my own pedals from scratch, I bought one just to mess around with and it will be here this week. I would never have bought a Klon or Klon clone pedal normally because I play with high gain and I don't see the point to a half distortion pedal, but at the $99.00 price range compared to at least $120.00 for most of the other clones I wanted to see what all of the hubbub is about with the Klon. I think this KDH guy is really reaching down deep to say anything negative about the NotaKlon. I think it was a great idea with a unique and brilliant marketing strategy, and let's face it, until they catch up with the demand, you are on a 4 month waiting list, so if you don't like it, you can probably sell it at a small profit.
I bought one because I like the idea of it. Building your own pedal (simple as it is), is akin to building your own lightsaber when you visit Disney. There’s a bit more of a connection to something you put together yourself, and you’re more likely to be more creative when you have more of a connection to your gear (at least I do).
When I made my lightsabe I made it purple thinking I was so cool and unique only to realize all the other kids in the line also were clutching their purple custom sabres!
Not unlike doing a parts guitar build, or even modding the hell out of a guitar. There's just a thing to it even if you didn't shape the neck yourself.
Build a real pedal. It isn't difficult. There's plenty of REAL kits out there that are super easy to make and come with instructions even a chimp could understand. They're not even expensive, maybe $20 and that's for ALL the parts; enclosure, jacks, footswitch. Not just a PCB and components. It's incredibly fun and 10000000x more satisfying knowing you've actually built something, not just done up a few nuts. Better yet, look up Vero board/strip board layouts and watch a video or two on how to solder.
Exactly. I doubt they plan on making it a permanant 'in stock' item. It's meant as a kind of novelty for people to experience pedal building but have no training in electronics. As for guitarists being 'stupid' for paying a lot of money for a Klon, it's no different than someone paying $20K + for a 50's Gibson or someone paying hundreds of dollars for a baseball/hockey card, it's an 'exclusivity' thing so people can show off how much money they have. Personally, I have no interest in the pedal but I don't t think JHS is 'scamming' people by charging the same as their other pedals, it could very well be that their normal manufacturer couldn't make the kits, so they had to source it out somewhere else and their prices could have been more, etc.... Sometimes I think KDH just doesn't want anyone to just have fun with something... lol..
Swing and a miss on this one. I don’t own any JHS pedals(I do own a klon klone), but I’m getting one of these. Love the idea, the packaging and the snap-tite and turn some screws assembly. It’s fun and funny. No one is pretending that they’re a real pedal builder. If you don’t want one, just don’t get one. Love your reporting on actual issues. But this just looks like you needed some views this week.
I’m no JHS fanboy, but there is an element of design and testing of something to be assembled at home. Arguably, the simpler the assembly process, the more designing is needed. Just a thought.
For a first step into the world of pedal building it could be the spark that some people needed to go down the rabbit hole. This is a gimmick but I think it is more intentional than just pocket the profits. In case it hasn't clicked yet, it's brilliant marketing.
@@PeaceWatcher-ek7zl I agree with you. I prefer to buy a pedal that will last me a lifetime if I choose to keep it for that long. Marketing isn't necessarily something you have to pay for as the consumer. Businesses typically will pay to market a product. There is a lot of bad marketing. This didn't cost JHS much to market but they got a huge return by playing off if the IKEA buying and assembling experience. Doesn't cost the buyer anything extra. The only thing they lose is the warranty. For these pcb board pedals that's not a big risk honestly. The thing that got me in the video was breaking the wrenches off of the PCB. I cringed when they did it lol.
You actually think the people who love the idea for this pedal and have launched them into pre order status are simpletons? I'd tend to think that the folks who don't get the idea of this pedal are the simpletons but to each his own.
You took ten minutes to get to "won't somebody please think of the consumer protections", ten minutes for a hot euro take of " I certainly hope this doesnt lead to less government involvement in my life"
Like others have said, people have been begging for this re-release for years. Especially because it isn't just a klon copy, it also has the fantastic mod they used to do. When I saw I could get that pedal, for 99 bucks, I was psyched and hopped on it. Also, it's just a really fun idea. Gooping the magic circuits lol, c'mon that's great.
I think this one flew over your head. This was a fun interactive joke. A lot of effort went into to designing the kit to be buildable sans soldering iron
I dig your videos but... the real masterclass in marketing is finding a nit to pick with this pedal. He did it DIY to straddle the moral conundrum he encountered with Bill Finnegan.
As a person who designs printed circuit boards, and builds original guitar pedals and amplifiers, I must say that the notaklon is an awesome product, it opens the doors for people that may have never considered building electronic devices. I'd imagine this will inspire a new generation of builders, which is really cool to think about
hey man, you got a lot of nerve saying I'm qualified, also I find the antiquated saying charming, I've never heard that before, not sure what it means, but man I will use that one! Thanks man!@@steveshadforth8792
The $99 price for the JHS Notaklon is fair. Criticizing seems unnecessary. The pedal's appeal lies in its DIY aspect, akin to building models as a kid. While pros may not buy it for themselves, it's popular for shared building experiences with children, collectibility, and for those who enjoy building and using it. Ultimately, the $99 spent is well worth the joyful experience it provides.
I think the perceived value is twofold: 1. You build it. You might learn something. It feels good to look down at it and think 'yeah, I remember the fun I had with that', 2. They can simply crank out the kits a lot _faster_ than building them, so no backorders.The IKEA motif is hilarious.
You won't learn anything except how to use a screwdriver and spanner. Cranking out built kits would be a lot faster. Assembly would take about 5 minutes absolute max in a factory environment, there would be less paperwork and it could be much better designed and much smaller using less materials. And, yes, I have watched the assembly video. And yes, I did used to work in electronic equipment supply and installation. Nearly all guitar pedals are overpriced by about 50%.
@@edeledeledel5490 Keyword: 'perceived'. So if it takes less time to build it than to put all the parts in a box, then that value is negative. Maybe the architecture of the thing lends itself to quick mods and circuit bending. Maybe it's just fun. Buy a built one. This is obviously not for you. Will I buy one? No. But I do get why a lot of people would. He'll sell a ton, no matter how irrational or overpriced they are 'perceived' to be. Good marketing.
@@johnmcevoy3598 I won't buy any pedal for $99. That price is taking the piss, as they all do, except the cheap clones. Nothing to do with the design and production cost, it's what guitarists imagine they have to pay, and what manufacturers have been getting away with. And it doesn't lend itself to quick mods and circuit bending; it's just two integrated circuit boards connected by plug in cables. It's just slick marketing to gullible people, and a way to save money on guarantees, and possibly quality.
@@johnmcevoy3598 Just perceptive. F*ckwits paying $1000 dollars for an ancient piece of crap just annoys me. Let alone £99 for modern equivalent that should be priced at about $40. Idiots paying over the top makes it MORE EXPENSIVE FOR EVERYONE ELSE Not everyone is as rich as you obviously are. I could afford to buy 100 of them, and not notice it. But I'm lucky. And one reason I'm lucky, is I don't pay over the odds.
You’re missing the whole point. This is a fun toy, like a Lego kit. A fun little project for folks. And unlike my Christmas gift of a few years ago, my beloved Lego Yellow Submarine, I’ll end up with something I’ll get musical use out of, and might put on my pedalboard. I could build StewMac’s Ghost Drive, and was thinking about doing just that, when I saw JHS’s fun video. This is about fun. Not labor saving or warranties. Lighten up.
Every video he does comes across like he believes he’s a genius at all levels. He Attacks marketing, attacks products, attacks playing attacks literally any and everything. He knows best because he has a camera and a TH-cam account . 😂
The guy is clearly a marketing wiz. And yes, the statement on your shirt is bang on. I would assume every DIY kit everywhere is non returnable. It's not like he invented the idea of a DIY pedal kit, just the first one available i know of from a major manufacturer. JHS are obviously providing a unique experience with this.
If this pedal had been manufactured normally (no PCB snapping, etc.), I think build time for JHS's line workers would be ~5 minutes. When you factor in the atypical engineering and packaging compared to all their other products, they're not saving any money on assembly labor versus this presentation's bells and whistles. The warranty issue is something to be aware of, but the DIY thing is just a fun gimmick, not a back door cost cut. I don't think this is going to be a new trend among the "big indie" brands, as it's a whole lot more work than just making regular pedals.
You have missed the point. Fun! Building your own pedal that looks like something you picked up at IKEA is fun. It could have been a different style pedal and I still would have been interested. $99 bucks is cheap and the idea is just fun.
An Aliexpress medium sized-box Klon kit resembling the Notaklon that requires soldering seems to cost about 42 USD without shipping. The big full-sized enclosure ones seem to cost more than the JHS. 99 USD for a JHS kit that does not require soldering, has the whole JHS cutesy Ikea branding, seems to make a lot of sense. Production for this pedal is different from the other 3 series pedals: they don't use the same size enclosure, the PCB is very different, fancy box, yada yada. If JHS priced this higher, and used the mystique and collectability of the original JHS klones as a selling point, then yeah that would be a bit crass. But this is 99USD for what is still a boutique, USA brand. And I'm not even someone who is especially enticed by "boutique, USA" - I don't own very many pedals. If you want to outline what the pedal industry is doing wrong as a whole: high prices, unoriginality, bad warranty options for buyers - then it would be helpful to point out at least a few other examples where this is the case. Fixating on JHS and insinuating that most players are parasocial dupes is a lazy overgeneralisation. I appreciate this channel's desire to advocate for consumers. However, the content here is also sometimes contrarian for the sake of being contrarian. It makes use of the same clickbait, influencer style tropes that it purports to despise.
Normally I'm right there with you, but you lost me here. What you call marketing, I call fun. You aren't just buying "a pedal" - I'd suspect most of the 22,000 buyers probably already have an Archer or Tumnus (or both). This was a fun idea, and the buyers are buying into the fun, and getting a pedal as a bonus. It's like a pet rock, only more expensive and functional. And at $99, it about the same price as the Stewmac pedal kits (in fact cheaper than their KLONE), which are also fun, if a lot less cheeky and a TON more complicated to build..
Just seems like a fun little kit to me. I like diy stuff becasue I like to put stuff together. I feel like some if the changes needed to be able to bundle this as a diy kit wouldn't be free for Jhs either. I'm not sure how it would compare with labor costs
That's called good marketing. Good for them and I think their main income source is on the more boutique pedals. Also Josh is the only one I know on TH-cam that talks more about the products from the rivals than his.
Actually similar things have been done in the synth space for quite some time by big brands like Korg with their NTS-1 and also some smaller brands, mainly in the DIY space. It didnt really take off, but synths are also way more complex and often more original than guitar pedals.
You based your argument on the 3 series demonstrating that a pedal with 3 knobs and two switches can be sold for $99 but a pedal's value is almost exclusively determined by it's internal components and manufacturing cost. Just because you can point to other pedals that look the same doesn;t mean you can make comparisons and conclusions about the profit margin of the notaklon because you haven't considered internal components. You also don't really consider that the building process is actually a major gain to most of the buyers, not just a method of accessing a overall discount.
I think you’re sort of missing the point of this product. It’s supposed to be a fun project thing for pedal/guitar nerds. It’s not meant to be taken that seriously. It was meant as like, a Christmas gift for pedal nerds to “build” themselves. I don’t think this is even intended to be a serious pedal. That’s the vibe I got from their launch video anyway.
I'm always frustrated with myself when I click on one of your videos. I feel like so much of what you do is to troll other people who are actually creating something and putting in the effort. You intentionally create this sort of content for views and people respond because a certain percentage of people are trolls. This video is a perfect example. You completely miss the point of the pedal as pure genius because you never even say the word "IKEA" in this video. The whole thing about the DIY, the name, the packaging, everything is an homage to the Klon AND IKEA at the same time. It is so clever. It is satire. To pretend that the warranty point is just you "thinking critically" about the product doesn't make any sense. If another pedal company made an attempt at being this clever they would be laughed at because JHS already did this. It is pedal making and pop art. JHS should be applauded for this pedal. They should sell it out many times over because they won the game. Thank goodness creative people do what they do.
The main idea that you are missing is the fact that you can have a pedal that sounds almost identical to an original Klon, (which is unobtainable by most guitarists) and is a fun little project that you can do yourself. And it only costs $100. So what exactly is the problem here? I ordered one and should be receiving it within a few weeks and I’m very much looking forward to assembling it and rocking out with it. How much more fun do you want for a hundred damn dollars?😆
I think you need to also include that the amount of parts used to make this pedal is by far more than the typical 3 Series, therefore if they were to have built it for you it would have been more like $150. I applaud JHS as this is so far away from what everyone else offers. And it was fun to put together and paint. Yes it has so many pluses for JHS, good for them. keep 'em coming!
So the complaint at the end comes down to “I don’t like how basic economics and supply and demand work.” So what if other companies copy the same thing and save on labor costs while making better profit margins? If they deliver a product consumers like and are willing to pay for, that’s what a free market is. If consumers don’t like the price the product and associated experience is for, they won’t buy it, and companies will have to lower prices or figure out how to bring down their own cost to produce. What’s the problem here? What this comes down to is KDH just arbitrarily attaching his own need to assemble a product at the same price as a finished product and assuming that’s how everyone else would feel if they really stopped to think about it. It’s not a mass problem, it’s a personal problem
You missed the whole point. The whole thing with this pedal is that it is an IKEA type DIY (aka not really a diy, just assembling the parts) project. That's the selling point. The whole packaging, manual, looks, etc shows it. And it sounds good on top of it being a parody of both IKEA and Klon. It is not about saving costs, but as the results show - it is a good market research, business decisions and storytelling/marketing. The money saving (if there is any) comes only as a benefit as most JHS pedals are pretty affordable if you brake them down by components.
Not sure the “don’t shoot the messenger” defence applies here. It’s a reasonable product at a fair price. I imagine warranty is a minor factor in most purchases, if a factor at all. As most have said, it’s a fun gimmick which customers are willingly opting for. Why the sour take?
One thing you said that I have to call out is yeah, many people get into electronics by taking things apart and putting them back together. I’m a licensed electrician, and I got my start literally by taking things part, looking at the parts, then just putting it back together and not touching a thing. When I started collecting guitar pedals, I did the same thing. The more pedals I took apart to check out, the more I desired to mess with them myself. So yeah, there’s definitely value in a pack like this. The skills aren’t 1-1, but if you can’t stand putting this kit together, you probably won’t stand putting together a real kit that’s more involved. It’s like I wasn’t truly interested in fully learning an instrument, till I saw one of my teachers playing bass one day at school. It was the first time I saw slap bass being done. Yeah I loved music, but you bet i went home after school and begged my parents for a bass guitar after seeing that. I wouldn’t be so dismissive of this. People, especially kids, become obsessed with stuff by doing things like this all the time.
I took apart a dozen things before I was 16 years old. It only makes sense that Josh, having kids, would want to create something that his kid could put together.
I know that this channel gets likes for calling out B.S. but this one is just a wet blanket on a bit of fun. Look. My 10 year old plays guitar and he doesn't have any pedals. This going to be his first. He's going to absolutely love this
"they either save on labour or on the parts" you are forgetting the design of a PCB to make it user friendly and the fun factor compared to the 3 series
I was initially planning on buying a Wampler Tumnus when JHS launched the Notaklön. I ended up ordering the JHS, it should arrive in April. My idea is to have my 10yo son help me build it as a father-son project and just have fun. I know I'll be so proud to have something special we have both done sitting on my pedalboard. And apparently the sound is no compromise at all so that's double win for me.
Well I think you might be missing the point. When I saw the video, the first thing that came to my mind is that it would be a fun project to do with my daughter. And I’m pretty sure that most of these pedals sold were purchased simply for that reason. It’s a great activity to do with your kids. Especially if they are too young to use a soldering iron. And at least in the end, compared to model projects that you assemble like planes, cars, or wathever useless things you can do, you get a pedal!
6:59 you talk about what you gain. You're missing that today in our wealthy society the experience is worth something. And JHS are selling you the experience of building that pedal, even if you don't own a soldering iron. It's just genius and I think the price is totally legitimate. My opinion of course!
I see where you are coming from, but i gotta disagree. I kinda see it as JHS' retaliation about how secretive the original pedal is. Here are the parts, literally stick em together and goop it over to be like the original if you like. There's no secret ingredient - even a kid could do it!
Maybe they're saving on labor cost but they're not saving money on logistics, because it comes in a large box. 2-3 times larger than an average pedal box.
Regarding the price; this has a bigger enclosure and more expensive knobs compared to the other $99 pedals. I bet this would have been something like $119 if it was completely assembled. If they wanted to hit the $99 price point while still meeting their profit margin, this is a cool, fun way to do it. I think you're right, though. This might turn into more companies doing this and it could be bad, long term.
It would only become a thing long term if people would continue to buy more semi-diy kits, which I highly doubt. JHS took advantage and played into a meme, when another company does it most people will feel like that's a lame try-hard attempt to be quirky and cool, so I don't see this catching up long term.
First off. I am not a JHS fan of any kind. I don't own any of his products. However... Seems you missed the mark in this one. Most people disagree. the pedal is a great way to getting someone interested in how pedals go together. Everyone starts somewhere. I started in high school by taking my guitars apart, and now I have a career in electronics. Sure it could have been 50 - 80$, but people don't seem to mind the price (considering sales). Maybe there just wasn't any other controversies to cover... slow week... But this is not something that anyone was/is mad about.
Yeah, I get your point, but ultimately it's a (presumedly) good pedal for £100. the novelty of building it is just a bit of fun. I think I would have an issue if it was a £300 pedal and I was assembling it myself. The Ikea self assembly vibe is just a very JHS style of gimmick, I think companies who copy it (and I'm sure there will be a few) will fall flat as it doesn't come with that JHS comedy brand. I know they are saving in production costs but it's not an extortionate item so I don"t feel ripped off or that they are being unduly greedy. Full disclosure I have bought one and I am looking forward to building it, You should market your DS1/Klon btw. Keep up the good work KDH and love your videos. p.s - Guitar players are stupid, I just agreed to wait three months for a £100 pedal I have to build myself.
Yes, this is the big point IMO. This pedal sounds fantastic and if assembling it myself to keep the price to $100 is what it takes to get a pretty much identical sounding Klone, while supporting an independent pedal maker who has given a lot of knowledge for free, I'm totally fine with it. If it was a subpar pedal, it would be totally different.
And honestly they probably are not saving anything now with how the blew through the initial 3k kits they had on hand ready to go and had like 20k more preorders after that. They are hiring new people and paying overtime and now are probably paying rush shipping on components too at this point per the video the released like maybe a week later.
Great video as usual! I'm going to feel free to disagree about a certain aspect of your concerns though. "All you get is the ability to say you did it yourself." To a great many people, if this is your first pedal kit, you will actually learn about the components of a pedal and how they interact during the process of putting it together. That learning process without having to solder anything is going to be quite valuable to anyone curious who has never done it before. From little kids all the way up to 40-50 year olds who have only ever bought pedals. For $100, that is really what this kit is for. It is not only an entry to pedals, but an entry to engineering! IMO there is great value there and I would be SUPER stoked to get one of these for Christmas or something.
Its wild how it doesnt work on everyone. They turn me off but Im willing to be they make good products. I cant stand the guy that does their youtube channel.
I'm a special case here in the sense that i plan to powdercoat the casing of my nötaklon and paint my own stuff on it. The pedal being sent unbuilt means i can do all that pre-assembly (which the instructional video states to do any aesthetic changes before assembly to avoid issues.) And i dont have to take the pedal apart beforehand. Im very lazy so i can appreciate that. I like the 3 series pedals i own, but i cant stand the bland white enclosures and I hope they dont abandon their more creative pedal aesthetic in favor of this all the way.
Pedal would have been $200 if they assembled this one. Regarding this could have been in the 3 Series, sure it could have been - and just like the $200 morning glory, superbolt, crayon, etc. The warranty issue isn't a big deal - it is a $99 pedal and also done PCB, I'm sure if there is some major issue they will sort it out. Part of being this big is actually having some customer support. Unlike Bill and his original klons
This is a textbook example of making a mountain out of a mole hill.
yep. clickbaitastic nonsense.
Does this guy just make videos for clicks or does he really believe what he's saying? I mean probably both.
I think it’s a fun gimmick that gets you a little more involved with your pedal without needing any skill. It’s cheaper than any other Klon kit out there as well. For a Klone that’s exactly like the real thing sound wise, it’s priced really well.
I really dont care for JHS or this specific pedal but we have to recognize that there’s a significant added cost to JHS when they decide to have all the extra packaging needed to sell this kit. Extra large box, anti-static bag, more complex pcb with special tools precut in it. Etc etc. I find the 99 price tag to be reasonable
Just so. And NOBODY here has mentioned the Goop. How much is the Goop!?
I couldn’t imagine making a whole video about this subject and not even mentioning this. Or the fact that Korg have also released solderless pedal kits. JHS even did a video about it this year. My honest guess is he liked that idea and also did it. I think this video is a little bit just making a video to make a video territory. He didn’t really make any solid points, just a lot of speculation.
Great point
at that quantity, i think thats alot less than you think it is.
Not to mention the hours of R&D required to make it a kit. The design approach would be much different from a standard JHS product, and that costs money too.
Yeah, I gotta agree with the others. The price is incredibly reasonable for the pedal even with having to assemble it. The ikea schtick is hilariously clever and the end result is a great klon clone.
Also, who needs warranty for a guitar pedal. These devices don’t die on you in less than 20 years if you use the right voltage to power it
@@rethardotv5874in my experience JHS have great customer service. I don’t see them hanging anyone out to dry, they’ve never operated like that. The Op just has whinge as a default mode.
and its super easy to assemble, so not sure why anyone would complain.
They have a video of kids literally building these pedals.
Nope, it's not reasonable price, maybe the box costs could make it more reasonable but in general whole guitar gear industry is overpriced solely because people are willing to pay way too much. Btw. It is the same case for other instruments too, though with acoustic ones the build quality somewhat matters
It’s just supposed to be a fun project. I don’t think 99 dollars is a lot to ask. I love this channel but I don’t think these points really matter for this product. And given many USA pedals are simply assembled in the US now and not even soldered in house I don’t think there’s any really trickery on their part. Even Walrus boxes say “assembled” not “built” in the USA. It’s cheaper to have parts surface mounted and not thru hole soldered.
I don't think you should see it as "trickery" per say. Rather just think about how influential JHS is (Bad Monkey fiasco) and how well this product is doing. People need to be at least a bit skeptical or else every other company will start doing it.
Plus no return policy for something that can be just as easily disassembled as it was assembled doesn't sit right with me.
@PuttinOnTheRiffs, You didn't even mention KDHs' main issue with this, which was the non return policy, and likely lesser warranty protection for the same price as a 3 series pedal.
KDH and fun don't go together.
@@castleanthrax1833 idk about this being really an issue and more of an observation and a comparison. If you buy any other build your own you cannot return it unless it’s missing parts. How would the return policy work on a product like this and how would jhs be able to resell this product after the fact? As “returned and assembled?” Would it even be work $100 at that point? There’s really no way to do it that I can think of. Given the overhead of a company like jhs, the number of employees, they probably offer insurances to all of them, the already finished enclosure and the unique design idea I was shocked it wasn’t $120+ and personally I’d buy it at that price. Yes, it’s a simple finish but it’s still a cost to powder coat white and print on them. It’s positioned well in the market in the grand scheme.
@@CoolGuyAtlas I feel that. But it’s just a project and all other companies (BYOC, pedalparts, stew Mac) have similar policies on their builds. It’s very standard.
This convinced me to buy a notaklon.
I think this actually goes back to Josh and Bill Finnegan. Bill didn’t like Josh making a clone of his pedal and at the time Bill wasn’t making any. Josh told Bill that when Bill started making Klons again, Josh would stop making his clone. A promise he kept. Fast forward ten years and now there are hundreds of klones by different brands. People have asked JHS for years to bring back their klone, but as Josh mentioned in a Q&A a few years ago, Bill won’t respond to tell him if he’s ok with Josh making a klone again. So my first thought when I saw the video for the release was ‘haha, technically he’s not making it.’ That’s my honest guess on why they did it this way.
And I don’t disagree with KDHs assessment that they probably could have released this fully built, with a warranty, for the same price. But Josh did mention cheaper and equally priced alternatives in his video if you aren’t interested in ‘building’ one of your own.
I have never met Josh and only know him from his videos but the impression I get form his videos is that you could be 100% correct and if you are it would be hilarious and give us yet another reason to love JHS. KDH overlooks the fact that this concept is fun and allows one to learn something new even if it is of limited application. We live in a world where less and less of us ever do something with our hands besides type on a keyboard and something like this would be go for a lot of us. In a Capitalist country Josh gets to charge whatever he wants for his pedals and make and sell them however he wises. It is the consumer who decides if it what Josh did was a good move. The consumer has spoken. I enjoy the videos of KDH but think he is wrong on this one.
We can't blame manufacturers wanting to profit from the almost limitless stupidity of guitar players...can we?😂
Exactly correct. He promised to not build a klon. So he lets the customer "build" a "notaklön" in the easiest way possible to keep his promise in this way of argument.
Not only in that marketing video, but if look in the JHS archive, they did a live-stream (1h30m or so??) devoted to Klon clones, down to almost the cheapest of the cheap ($35, I think, for the cheapest they did in *that* video). The message being that they ALL could be made to sound indistinguishable from the original. Meanwhile, KDH's points stand, of course. :)
That's just taking advantage of a technicality to make money though. Just a shrewd business move and a disregard for the spirit of the verbal agreement. End of the day I really don't care but if what you say is true that's all it is. Like KDH says the entire pedal market is derivative of itself. Nearly every pedal has at least 15 clones aside from some of the super esoteric ones.
1. It's very reasonably priced
2. Assembly is part of the fun
3. The design and packaging for this kit almost certainly costs more than the labor savings of assembly
The ability to “say you built a pedal” you don’t think there’s a bunch of kids that are going to get into pedal building because of this? You really don’t see any inherent value from an educational or pedal cultural perspective? It’s brilliant and affordable on every front and of course marketing gold. But I really think you’re truly underestimating the educational value.
Running out of "gotcha" topics? Don't worry KDH, someone will screw up again soon. This is just a fun pedal. You're definitely looking to hard at this.
sounded almost angry that someone is making millions out of a good idea while he's not
Putting it together is part of the fun. Plus the whole goop thing adds a novelty to it. I think it’s a good way to introduce people to DIY pedal making. It’s like saying you shouldn’t get a Lego car cuz you can get a normal toy car for cheaper. My only problem has nothing to do with JHS or the kit itself, I’m just annoyed people are already trying to scalp these for more than double the price. If you’re scalping a solderless diy pedal kit you’re what’s wrong with the guitar market.
The soldering is what makes a DIY a DIY. Did you watch the video?
You aren't making shit you put a couple nuts on an already assembled PCB
@@MiamiVisor Yes. It's a dumb video.
Yeah, I agree. I have the StewMac Ghost Drive, and it was fun to put together. It also gives you a little kick of pride that you made the thing. But that's my skill level and the amount of time I'm willing to put in it. Others might think that's pointless, and the only way to actually feel like you made the pedal is to design and etch the PCB and make the enclosure from scratch. And for others, soldering itself is out of the question, so a kit like this one from JHS is enough to give them that kick. It's nice that we have options, because, yes, the feeling of making the thing yourself, no matter your skill level or the amount of effort you're willing to spend, does matter a lot.
Scalper are literally cancer cell in any market
I like your videos and like your opinions on most all things guitar related. But I'm not sure about your take on this one. I build my own pedals and have even built quite a few amplifiers from scratch. I have also built several Klon clone pedals. However I really like and applaud what JHS are doing here. Offering a DIY introductory product like is brilliant, and I think will only increase the number of DIYers out there. JHS are doing a great job of offering a product that is both a great sounding pedal and also a gateway into the DIY community.
I think this is awesome. Some kid will buy this pedal kit , become inspired, and will eventually go on to become the next Leo Fender or Jim Marshall, etc. Please don't hate on this. The notaklon is a fantastic idea and props to JHS for understanding this and taking full advantage of it.
Agreed - the whole subtext from JHS of the DIY element of this pedal is to emphasise that there is no great "magic or "mystery" to guitar pedals, by getting consumers to really engage with what's inside their pedals. Let's face it, 95% of the appeal of effects pedals are kooky names, fun graphics and some twisty knobs and switches, rather than their tonal characteristics....which most of us get bored with after a short while anyway (hence massive used market). If this demystifies and encourages people to have a go at building or modding their own, then that's a great thing. I ordered a notaklon last night (wont get it until April!) purely to show my support to JHS (we need more authentic companies like them with something to say).
Yep! This is just a bit of fun. The minimal assembly really is just part of the joke, and I agree it’s likely a gateway for more builders to emerge. We need more projects like this.
Stew Mac DIY pedals cost more than these..... $99 is pretty dang cheap. I specifically wanted to build a pedal myself, so this looks perfect. I'm digging it man. Zero complaints from a pretty picky guy as far as knowing what I bought and being happy for what they are asking. Haven't even gotten it in yet.
Bah Humbug! It’s fun to put it together with a young kid or guitar student. They get to see the insides and maybe get excited about playing. I’d pay extra for a boss pedal that does this for the same reason.
It's a novelty, I thought that was widely understood. The whole thing is a PR exercise - it's very clever marketing!
I don’t think it’s just a PR exercise. It’s more than that. It’s fun, it’s getting people into pedals in a new way and gave people the JHS Klon what they wanted.
Spit on!!! We are about to wake up. Like in the 70’s looking back at 50’s TV marketing. 🙈It’s marketing. Making people feel
Good about buying stuff. That’s all it is.
It’s not a PR exercise. It’s a product. So far, it’s been a very successful product. The most successful thing JHS has ever produced, in fact.
Wearing a $3000 LV sweater-- thats a novelty. This is an extremely practical and well priced tool, as are many JHS pedals in my professional experience as a guitarist
@@andsoistoppedIt is getting people into buying unbuilt pedals at full price without warranty.
The t-shirt is right unfortunately. 😁
I ordered 3 of them for my sons and I to assemble as a fun project. I don’t buy many expensive pedals but if I did Josh and the good folks at JHS would get my money. He is the one guy who makes more videos praising the competition than his own products.
Well said! I will support and continue to support JHS. The 3-series pedals are quality sounding and reliable. A way better value at $99 than the noisy, low QC (and sometimes horrible sounding) $30 mini pedals you get from Amazon Basics or Donner.
I own and use (and love) the Bad Monkey pedal as my main OD. I have been meaning for a couple of years to pick another one up because they are so good and so inexpensive. Then Josh does his video about them and they shot up to $500! 🤯🤬
I don’t blame Josh though. I’ll just wait till they are forgotten again by the lemmings of the guitar world.
true!!!
@@greatscottvoicemedia8651you can probably just get a hard drive now and get the exact sound...
Other companies can try, but part of JHS’ success is their marketing ability, not many companies can replicate that. Also, feels a bit odd to assume that this pedal would have been 99 even if it came fully assembled
Yeah he isn't familiar with touch time and the downstream interactions that happen with something that IS assembled - QA, for example.
@@CyberneticArgumentCreator Agree. His schtick is contrarian-take-on-popular-or-topical-theme-of-the-day, and his take on this pedal is pretty ignorant.
@@CyberneticArgumentCreator Bollocks - assembly of this product in the US would cost about $3 per unit and in the far east $1 a unit, including overheads. If it wasn't designed for self assembly, it would cost about $10 less anyway, wouldn't be as large, and would use less resources and materials.
Low price, great quality sound (for the price), really accessible and affordable entry point for customers thinking about getting into pedal-building.
I think this video forgets the market entirely, it's not meant for experienced pedal builders, it's to lower the entry point into that world - not to redefine what it is to "build a pedal." This isn't a "step back or regression" as KDH says, there's nothing forcing people who want to build more expensive pedals from still building more expensive pedals. This whole thing feels like gear snobbery, I think what JHS is doing is a great initiative for newcomers, and we shouldn't be gatekeeping them.
He takes issue that the return policy is different than that of a normal pre-assembled pedal and feels you’re essentially being duped into doing something “tedious” in building it.
There.
Saved you 9 minutes and 45 seconds.
He's a good guy, but bad takes on this all around. I loved building it for the fifteen minutes it took (I took my time) and it's a really great pedal.
I had a problem with my Notaklon, they fixed it without question. They are awesome!!!
I don't really get your point. It's more of a gimmick than an actual "cheaper because you build it yourself" item. Hence the IKEA inspired name. ALL pedals cost insanely more than their build price, especially the boutique ones. So.... What ?
I think the point is more about the loss of warranty protection than anyone spending $99 and you put it together. In the end, the DIY aspect is just fun, but, because YOU are responsible for the assembly and if you make a mess of it, you're on your own. It's a small risk, one that I would take with no worries. I don't even think the biggest issue was with the warranty, but that copy-cats will start doing this more often.
did you graduate grade one ? A grade one would understand what he said AND he was correct.
Is this how you talk to people in real life?@@montyrayza7220
@montyrayza7220 no need to be an ass. Get back to your eat the rich wankery now. I've literally NEVER had to use a warranty on a pedal in 20+ years of playing. You guys are really reaching here to find anything dramatic, and I'm starting to think it's more just to get hits and clicks off the coattails of a trending item, rather than a genuine warning.
@@Eric_01 There's no loss of warranty protection. Only loss of return policy, which makes sense since the build process involves steps that can't be undone.
Categorically. It’s not a crime in any way for a business t make a product that’s compelling to its customer base and then sell A LOT of that product. That’s the idea of business. I think pointing out how many sold how quickly they did is just pointing out the creative prowess of the people at JHS.
This idea that for some reason musical equipment businesses shouldn’t enjoy success commercially being shared by a TH-cam channel who’s success comes from whether people watch it or not is not reasonable. Pot Kettle like.
Creatively JHS has the best and most Genuine brand out there for me. The he quality of the record recommendations says that comprehensively as far as I’m concerned.
Identifying this opportunity is just an extension of that. JHS are exactly what a pedal brand should be.
I’m really stocked that another Irish channel has done as well as you have KDH. And I really enjoyed your interview with the wampler lads. So respect to you man. But your content is not for me.
I have appreciated your calling out bullshit of different companies over the years (example: Andertons) but criticizing the $99 cost for a really novel experience is really pushing it. Imagine how many kids are going to get a chance to assemble this who don't (yet) have soldering skills or access to tools? If they sell say 50,000 of these by the time this is all said and done, imagine how many people who had a chance to put this together might catch the "building stuff is fun" bug?
I think JHS is taking the piss - by involving the customer in the DIY process of “building” and “gooping” they’re mocking the Klon market. I love it. And I think they’re uniquely positioned as a brand to pull something like this off…. Can’t wait to see what’s next from them. (I don’t own any JHS pedals)
I enjoy your channel kdh but this was a massive stretch of a video and it felt like it too, felt like a lot of yatta yatta for a weak argument in the end. I'm not a jhs fan boy, I think this is a cute product, I don't think the price or the lack of warranty is a big deal at all. In fact I'd be willing to bet money that if you had a problem with a notaklon they would be very helpful, that's been my experience with several American pedal brands, they don't have to be as helpful as they are
I think you missed a point here. To make the pedal easy to put together for the consumer, JHS would have constructed this pedal differently to say the 3 series. There is still labour involved from JHS to print the circuit board and attach the quick connect ribbon parts, which I doubt would be in other pedals. Like you said, the majority of the pedal is already built, plus there's the extra parts added so the customer can construct it, specifically the ribbon attachment.
Mine's being delivered tomorrow. Im not fussed about the warranty and frankly i dont really need another Klon clone, but the marketing was great, as is the ikea design concept. Its a bit of fun and i'm happy to support companies I like that make great products. It was only $99, which is only the same price as a cup of coffee. My only regret is that i didnt buy two.
Companies sure love guys like you ... one is born every minute ..
@@montyrayza7220 haha yeah they bought a recreation of a legendary pedal for under $100 that they will enjoy assembling that will give them a long time of satisfaction, and it will sound great, what a sucker! /s
@@montyrayza7220 Damn, because of your comment, now I feel like a sucker because I bought a product that I liked with money I can afford. For the record, 21 babies are born every minute and you need to lighten up.
...mmm .you need to change coffee shop mate!
@montyrayza7220 I’d would much rather be a sucker than a miserable, cynical asshole, but that’s just me…
I have a 5 year old who loves to do everything I do. He lacks the soldering skills and patience to complete pedals,so I try to simplify them for him. This is someone else’s version of what I do for my son. I ordered one for him immediately and am excited for him to build it. Kids (of all ages) love projects and having more immediate gratification.
I don't mind the Notaklon being 99 dollars as I assumed that the price was because of the fun IKEA branding and all of the design work that went into it, and to your point about more clones coming out and mimicking the Notaklon, I seriously don't think that will be a problem, because once again the key selling point of the Notaklon, the IKEA aesthetic which will get old fast.. People will stop buying it, and JHS as a brand, which is something literally no other pedal company has.
Agreed, right or wrong its hard to criticize the notaklon without mentioning the whole ikea model that was very deliberate and kitsch.
When i heard it was no-solder my first thought was "has he developed a 2-pack solder paste?" Because honestly building a klon from a box of parts and a pcb is so unbelievably piss easy the only issue i could see is access to a soldering iron.
I was very disapointed to see it was just two boards that clip together because it could have been a great opportunity to show people how simple these devices are and how they dont really need to be spending their money on stuff like clean boosts, overdrives, fuzz, simple delay lines etc etc.
@@mrrootytooty5797 while I agree in principle with your argument, yes making these pedals yourself is easy and cheep, I work as a computer engineer and the first thing I learned is that people just don’t care and will spend asinine amounts in order to not have to learn anything or do anything themselves. The notaklon serves this exact purpose it’s a fun well designed “diy” pedal that makes people think they are crafty without actually alienating anyone or making them work
@@mrrootytooty5797I think many people have money and like spending it. While those that want to cheap out will certainly find all these TH-cam videos about cheap pedals. So I think the only buyers of expensive pedals these days are those that just want to buy something expensive.
@@FalconiusIt's amazing how much money people will spend just to remain ignorant. I say this as someone who is smart enough to realize how stupid they are 😀
Although I am not a big JHS fan, and I do build my own pedals from scratch, I bought one just to mess around with and it will be here this week. I would never have bought a Klon or Klon clone pedal normally because I play with high gain and I don't see the point to a half distortion pedal, but at the $99.00 price range compared to at least $120.00 for most of the other clones I wanted to see what all of the hubbub is about with the Klon. I think this KDH guy is really reaching down deep to say anything negative about the NotaKlon. I think it was a great idea with a unique and brilliant marketing strategy, and let's face it, until they catch up with the demand, you are on a 4 month waiting list, so if you don't like it, you can probably sell it at a small profit.
I bought one because I like the idea of it. Building your own pedal (simple as it is), is akin to building your own lightsaber when you visit Disney. There’s a bit more of a connection to something you put together yourself, and you’re more likely to be more creative when you have more of a connection to your gear (at least I do).
When I made my lightsabe I made it purple thinking I was so cool and unique only to realize all the other kids in the line also were clutching their purple custom sabres!
You paid to build a light saber lol enough said!
Not unlike doing a parts guitar build, or even modding the hell out of a guitar. There's just a thing to it even if you didn't shape the neck yourself.
Build a real pedal. It isn't difficult. There's plenty of REAL kits out there that are super easy to make and come with instructions even a chimp could understand. They're not even expensive, maybe $20 and that's for ALL the parts; enclosure, jacks, footswitch. Not just a PCB and components.
It's incredibly fun and 10000000x more satisfying knowing you've actually built something, not just done up a few nuts.
Better yet, look up Vero board/strip board layouts and watch a video or two on how to solder.
Exactly. I doubt they plan on making it a permanant 'in stock' item. It's meant as a kind of novelty for people to experience pedal building but have no training in electronics.
As for guitarists being 'stupid' for paying a lot of money for a Klon, it's no different than someone paying $20K + for a 50's Gibson or someone paying hundreds of dollars for a baseball/hockey card, it's an 'exclusivity' thing so people can show off how much money they have. Personally, I have no interest in the pedal but I don't t think JHS is 'scamming' people by charging the same as their other pedals, it could very well be that their normal manufacturer couldn't make the kits, so they had to source it out somewhere else and their prices could have been more, etc.... Sometimes I think KDH just doesn't want anyone to just have fun with something... lol..
Swing and a miss on this one. I don’t own any JHS pedals(I do own a klon klone), but I’m getting one of these. Love the idea, the packaging and the snap-tite and turn some screws assembly. It’s fun and funny. No one is pretending that they’re a real pedal builder. If you don’t want one, just don’t get one. Love your reporting on actual issues. But this just looks like you needed some views this week.
$100 and I have to build it myself? I personally agree with the video. Sounds like some GOOD JHS kool aid.
Marketing genius. I bought one just to support JHS. They do great videos and are entertaining. I agree it’s not much diy but now I have a $99 Klon.
Me too.
I’m no JHS fanboy, but there is an element of design and testing of something to be assembled at home. Arguably, the simpler the assembly process, the more designing is needed. Just a thought.
For a first step into the world of pedal building it could be the spark that some people needed to go down the rabbit hole. This is a gimmick but I think it is more intentional than just pocket the profits. In case it hasn't clicked yet, it's brilliant marketing.
@@PeaceWatcher-ek7zl Yes my point is the things he's complaining about is part of the marketing. I feel like he's really reaching for this one.
@@PeaceWatcher-ek7zl I agree with you. I prefer to buy a pedal that will last me a lifetime if I choose to keep it for that long. Marketing isn't necessarily something you have to pay for as the consumer. Businesses typically will pay to market a product. There is a lot of bad marketing. This didn't cost JHS much to market but they got a huge return by playing off if the IKEA buying and assembling experience. Doesn't cost the buyer anything extra. The only thing they lose is the warranty. For these pcb board pedals that's not a big risk honestly. The thing that got me in the video was breaking the wrenches off of the PCB. I cringed when they did it lol.
You actually think the people who love the idea for this pedal and have launched them into pre order status are simpletons? I'd tend to think that the folks who don't get the idea of this pedal are the simpletons but to each his own.
@@PeaceWatcher-ek7zlNo one loves you and that's why you're so angry.
You took ten minutes to get to "won't somebody please think of the consumer protections", ten minutes for a hot euro take of " I certainly hope this doesnt lead to less government involvement in my life"
Like others have said, people have been begging for this re-release for years. Especially because it isn't just a klon copy, it also has the fantastic mod they used to do. When I saw I could get that pedal, for 99 bucks, I was psyched and hopped on it. Also, it's just a really fun idea. Gooping the magic circuits lol, c'mon that's great.
I think this one flew over your head.
This was a fun interactive joke.
A lot of effort went into to designing the kit to be buildable sans soldering iron
It’s just a little interactive project that can teach the inner workings of a pedal.
I dig your videos but... the real masterclass in marketing is finding a nit to pick with this pedal. He did it DIY to straddle the moral conundrum he encountered with Bill Finnegan.
As a person who designs printed circuit boards, and builds original guitar pedals and amplifiers, I must say that the notaklon is an awesome product, it opens the doors for people that may have never considered building electronic devices. I'd imagine this will inspire a new generation of builders, which is really cool to think about
oh what bollocks, its like saying paint by numbers will inspire the next Picasso.
that's true, people with that point of view simply don't have the temperament for electronics engineering @@steveshadforth8792
@@pixelguitardude blah blah I’m a qualified electronic technician so Wind your neck in boy
hey man, you got a lot of nerve saying I'm qualified, also I find the antiquated saying charming, I've never heard that before, not sure what it means, but man I will use that one! Thanks man!@@steveshadforth8792
The $99 price for the JHS Notaklon is fair. Criticizing seems unnecessary. The pedal's appeal lies in its DIY aspect, akin to building models as a kid. While pros may not buy it for themselves, it's popular for shared building experiences with children, collectibility, and for those who enjoy building and using it. Ultimately, the $99 spent is well worth the joyful experience it provides.
What is the warranty on a full blown DIY solder yourself pedal?
Such a none issue. Would be like moaning about Korean BBQ "But I cooked it myself so why I do need to pay the same?" It's just some dumb fun novelty
I think the perceived value is twofold: 1. You build it. You might learn something. It feels good to look down at it and think 'yeah, I remember the fun I had with that', 2. They can simply crank out the kits a lot _faster_ than building them, so no backorders.The IKEA motif is hilarious.
You won't learn anything except how to use a screwdriver and spanner. Cranking out built kits would be a lot faster. Assembly would take about 5 minutes absolute max in a factory environment, there would be less paperwork and it could be much better designed and much smaller using less materials. And, yes, I have watched the assembly video. And yes, I did used to work in electronic equipment supply and installation. Nearly all guitar pedals are overpriced by about 50%.
@@edeledeledel5490 Keyword: 'perceived'. So if it takes less time to build it than to put all the parts in a box, then that value is negative. Maybe the architecture of the thing lends itself to quick mods and circuit bending. Maybe it's just fun. Buy a built one.
This is obviously not for you.
Will I buy one? No. But I do get why a lot of people would. He'll sell a ton, no matter how irrational or overpriced they are 'perceived' to be. Good marketing.
@@johnmcevoy3598 I won't buy any pedal for $99. That price is taking the piss, as they all do, except the cheap clones. Nothing to do with the design and production cost, it's what guitarists imagine they have to pay, and what manufacturers have been getting away with.
And it doesn't lend itself to quick mods and circuit bending; it's just two integrated circuit boards connected by plug in cables.
It's just slick marketing to gullible people, and a way to save money on guarantees, and possibly quality.
@@edeledeledel5490 So be angry and cheap. Great.
@@johnmcevoy3598 Just perceptive. F*ckwits paying $1000 dollars for an ancient piece of crap just annoys me. Let alone £99 for modern equivalent that should be priced at about $40. Idiots paying over the top makes it MORE EXPENSIVE FOR EVERYONE ELSE Not everyone is as rich as you obviously are. I could afford to buy 100 of them, and not notice it. But I'm lucky. And one reason I'm lucky, is I don't pay over the odds.
You’re missing the whole point. This is a fun toy, like a Lego kit. A fun little project for folks. And unlike my Christmas gift of a few years ago, my beloved Lego Yellow Submarine, I’ll end up with something I’ll get musical use out of, and might put on my pedalboard.
I could build StewMac’s Ghost Drive, and was thinking about doing just that, when I saw JHS’s fun video.
This is about fun. Not labor saving or warranties. Lighten up.
my man you really are splitting hairs here
Really enjoy your channel, I was on the fence but after watching this, went and bought one, well preorder :)
I really think you're missing the point of the product dude.....
Every video he does comes across like he believes he’s a genius at all levels. He Attacks marketing, attacks products, attacks playing attacks literally any and everything. He knows best because he has a camera and a TH-cam account . 😂
The guy is clearly a marketing wiz. And yes, the statement on your shirt is bang on. I would assume every DIY kit everywhere is non returnable. It's not like he invented the idea of a DIY pedal kit, just the first one available i know of from a major manufacturer. JHS are obviously providing a unique experience with this.
Sorry pal, i'll be joining the others on this. Guess this'll be just your own issue on this one.
This guy is going to hit the roof when he hears about IKEA.
If this pedal had been manufactured normally (no PCB snapping, etc.), I think build time for JHS's line workers would be ~5 minutes. When you factor in the atypical engineering and packaging compared to all their other products, they're not saving any money on assembly labor versus this presentation's bells and whistles. The warranty issue is something to be aware of, but the DIY thing is just a fun gimmick, not a back door cost cut. I don't think this is going to be a new trend among the "big indie" brands, as it's a whole lot more work than just making regular pedals.
You have missed the point. Fun! Building your own pedal that looks like something you picked up at IKEA is fun. It could have been a different style pedal and I still would have been interested. $99 bucks is cheap and the idea is just fun.
An Aliexpress medium sized-box Klon kit resembling the Notaklon that requires soldering seems to cost about 42 USD without shipping. The big full-sized enclosure ones seem to cost more than the JHS. 99 USD for a JHS kit that does not require soldering, has the whole JHS cutesy Ikea branding, seems to make a lot of sense. Production for this pedal is different from the other 3 series pedals: they don't use the same size enclosure, the PCB is very different, fancy box, yada yada. If JHS priced this higher, and used the mystique and collectability of the original JHS klones as a selling point, then yeah that would be a bit crass. But this is 99USD for what is still a boutique, USA brand. And I'm not even someone who is especially enticed by "boutique, USA" - I don't own very many pedals. If you want to outline what the pedal industry is doing wrong as a whole: high prices, unoriginality, bad warranty options for buyers - then it would be helpful to point out at least a few other examples where this is the case. Fixating on JHS and insinuating that most players are parasocial dupes is a lazy overgeneralisation. I appreciate this channel's desire to advocate for consumers. However, the content here is also sometimes contrarian for the sake of being contrarian. It makes use of the same clickbait, influencer style tropes that it purports to despise.
He’s trying to get people to learn to build them. He’s trying to pass the torch
Normally I'm right there with you, but you lost me here. What you call marketing, I call fun. You aren't just buying "a pedal" - I'd suspect most of the 22,000 buyers probably already have an Archer or Tumnus (or both). This was a fun idea, and the buyers are buying into the fun, and getting a pedal as a bonus. It's like a pet rock, only more expensive and functional. And at $99, it about the same price as the Stewmac pedal kits (in fact cheaper than their KLONE), which are also fun, if a lot less cheeky and a TON more complicated to build..
Limited warranty still means manufacturer defects are covered, just means anything YOU break isn’t covered
Just seems like a fun little kit to me. I like diy stuff becasue I like to put stuff together. I feel like some if the changes needed to be able to bundle this as a diy kit wouldn't be free for Jhs either. I'm not sure how it would compare with labor costs
That's called good marketing. Good for them and I think their main income source is on the more boutique pedals. Also Josh is the only one I know on TH-cam that talks more about the products from the rivals than his.
Actually similar things have been done in the synth space for quite some time by big brands like Korg with their NTS-1 and also some smaller brands, mainly in the DIY space. It didnt really take off, but synths are also way more complex and often more original than guitar pedals.
I put together a moog werkstat diy kit that's basically the same. Pcb you snap in place and tighten washers and nuts, and screws.
@@tigmil8116 yes totally forgot that one. Perfect example for a bigger company doing it.
NTS = not the synth.... I see what Josh has done here
You based your argument on the 3 series demonstrating that a pedal with 3 knobs and two switches can be sold for $99 but a pedal's value is almost exclusively determined by it's internal components and manufacturing cost. Just because you can point to other pedals that look the same doesn;t mean you can make comparisons and conclusions about the profit margin of the notaklon because you haven't considered internal components. You also don't really consider that the building process is actually a major gain to most of the buyers, not just a method of accessing a overall discount.
I like a lot of your other videos criticizing internet guitar brands, but I think you're nitpicking this pretty hard.
I think you’re sort of missing the point of this product. It’s supposed to be a fun project thing for pedal/guitar nerds. It’s not meant to be taken that seriously. It was meant as like, a Christmas gift for pedal nerds to “build” themselves. I don’t think this is even intended to be a serious pedal. That’s the vibe I got from their launch video anyway.
I'm always frustrated with myself when I click on one of your videos. I feel like so much of what you do is to troll other people who are actually creating something and putting in the effort. You intentionally create this sort of content for views and people respond because a certain percentage of people are trolls. This video is a perfect example. You completely miss the point of the pedal as pure genius because you never even say the word "IKEA" in this video. The whole thing about the DIY, the name, the packaging, everything is an homage to the Klon AND IKEA at the same time. It is so clever. It is satire. To pretend that the warranty point is just you "thinking critically" about the product doesn't make any sense. If another pedal company made an attempt at being this clever they would be laughed at because JHS already did this. It is pedal making and pop art. JHS should be applauded for this pedal. They should sell it out many times over because they won the game. Thank goodness creative people do what they do.
The main idea that you are missing is the fact that you can have a pedal that sounds almost identical to an original Klon, (which is unobtainable by most guitarists) and is a fun little project that you can do yourself. And it only costs $100. So what exactly is the problem here? I ordered one and should be receiving it within a few weeks and I’m very much looking forward to assembling it and rocking out with it. How much more fun do you want for a hundred damn dollars?😆
I think you need to also include that the amount of parts used to make this pedal is by far more than the typical 3 Series, therefore if they were to have built it for you it would have been more like $150. I applaud JHS as this is so far away from what everyone else offers. And it was fun to put together and paint. Yes it has so many pluses for JHS, good for them. keep 'em coming!
So the complaint at the end comes down to “I don’t like how basic economics and supply and demand work.” So what if other companies copy the same thing and save on labor costs while making better profit margins? If they deliver a product consumers like and are willing to pay for, that’s what a free market is. If consumers don’t like the price the product and associated experience is for, they won’t buy it, and companies will have to lower prices or figure out how to bring down their own cost to produce. What’s the problem here? What this comes down to is KDH just arbitrarily attaching his own need to assemble a product at the same price as a finished product and assuming that’s how everyone else would feel if they really stopped to think about it. It’s not a mass problem, it’s a personal problem
Not an issue. the JHS NOTAKLON is a brilliant idea and I can't wait to get mine. $99 is cheap for this neat package that is supposed to be fun.
absolutely
You missed the whole point. The whole thing with this pedal is that it is an IKEA type DIY (aka not really a diy, just assembling the parts) project. That's the selling point. The whole packaging, manual, looks, etc shows it. And it sounds good on top of it being a parody of both IKEA and Klon.
It is not about saving costs, but as the results show - it is a good market research, business decisions and storytelling/marketing. The money saving (if there is any) comes only as a benefit as most JHS pedals are pretty affordable if you brake them down by components.
You are absolutely missing the point, It’s a game. Nobody is being hoodwinked. My t shirt says “this entire video is stupid”
Not sure the “don’t shoot the messenger” defence applies here. It’s a reasonable product at a fair price. I imagine warranty is a minor factor in most purchases, if a factor at all. As most have said, it’s a fun gimmick which customers are willingly opting for. Why the sour take?
One thing you said that I have to call out is yeah, many people get into electronics by taking things apart and putting them back together. I’m a licensed electrician, and I got my start literally by taking things part, looking at the parts, then just putting it back together and not touching a thing. When I started collecting guitar pedals, I did the same thing. The more pedals I took apart to check out, the more I desired to mess with them myself. So yeah, there’s definitely value in a pack like this. The skills aren’t 1-1, but if you can’t stand putting this kit together, you probably won’t stand putting together a real kit that’s more involved. It’s like I wasn’t truly interested in fully learning an instrument, till I saw one of my teachers playing bass one day at school. It was the first time I saw slap bass being done. Yeah I loved music, but you bet i went home after school and begged my parents for a bass guitar after seeing that. I wouldn’t be so dismissive of this. People, especially kids, become obsessed with stuff by doing things like this all the time.
I took apart a dozen things before I was 16 years old.
It only makes sense that Josh, having kids, would want to create something that his kid could put together.
I straight up bought this pedal to build it without learning to solder, im not even gonna put it on my pedalboard. Just feels really fun 😊
Id like to add im a wierd snob and won't put jhs on my board and i still bought it 😂
You sound like a real fun guy
I know that this channel gets likes for calling out B.S. but this one is just a wet blanket on a bit of fun.
Look. My 10 year old plays guitar and he doesn't have any pedals. This going to be his first.
He's going to absolutely love this
Chillax dude.
"they either save on labour or on the parts" you are forgetting the design of a PCB to make it user friendly and the fun factor compared to the 3 series
Every point you made you prefaced with "no one else is talking about this". maybe there is a reason for that. You’re starting to milk it now.
I was initially planning on buying a Wampler Tumnus when JHS launched the Notaklön. I ended up ordering the JHS, it should arrive in April. My idea is to have my 10yo son help me build it as a father-son project and just have fun. I know I'll be so proud to have something special we have both done sitting on my pedalboard. And apparently the sound is no compromise at all so that's double win for me.
Did KDH mess up his notaklon build ???
it sounds like he actually would be able to do that lol
I will never get the time from watching this video back.
Well I think you might be missing the point. When I saw the video, the first thing that came to my mind is that it would be a fun project to do with my daughter. And I’m pretty sure that most of these pedals sold were purchased simply for that reason. It’s a great activity to do with your kids. Especially if they are too young to use a soldering iron. And at least in the end, compared to model projects that you assemble like planes, cars, or wathever useless things you can do, you get a pedal!
Exactly
@@FilinMXr there’s literally nothing that says fun activity to do with your kids than the words « put goop here »! 😂😂
6:59 you talk about what you gain. You're missing that today in our wealthy society the experience is worth something. And JHS are selling you the experience of building that pedal, even if you don't own a soldering iron. It's just genius and I think the price is totally legitimate. My opinion of course!
I see where you are coming from, but i gotta disagree. I kinda see it as JHS' retaliation about how secretive the original pedal is.
Here are the parts, literally stick em together and goop it over to be like the original if you like. There's no secret ingredient - even a kid could do it!
Maybe they're saving on labor cost but they're not saving money on logistics, because it comes in a large box. 2-3 times larger than an average pedal box.
Regarding the price; this has a bigger enclosure and more expensive knobs compared to the other $99 pedals. I bet this would have been something like $119 if it was completely assembled. If they wanted to hit the $99 price point while still meeting their profit margin, this is a cool, fun way to do it. I think you're right, though. This might turn into more companies doing this and it could be bad, long term.
It would only become a thing long term if people would continue to buy more semi-diy kits, which I highly doubt. JHS took advantage and played into a meme, when another company does it most people will feel like that's a lame try-hard attempt to be quirky and cool, so I don't see this catching up long term.
First off. I am not a JHS fan of any kind. I don't own any of his products. However...
Seems you missed the mark in this one. Most people disagree. the pedal is a great way to getting someone interested in how pedals go together. Everyone starts somewhere. I started in high school by taking my guitars apart, and now I have a career in electronics. Sure it could have been 50 - 80$, but people don't seem to mind the price (considering sales).
Maybe there just wasn't any other controversies to cover... slow week... But this is not something that anyone was/is mad about.
Yeah, I get your point, but ultimately it's a (presumedly) good pedal for £100. the novelty of building it is just a bit of fun. I think I would have an issue if it was a £300 pedal and I was assembling it myself. The Ikea self assembly vibe is just a very JHS style of gimmick, I think companies who copy it (and I'm sure there will be a few) will fall flat as it doesn't come with that JHS comedy brand. I know they are saving in production costs but it's not an extortionate item so I don"t feel ripped off or that they are being unduly greedy. Full disclosure I have bought one and I am looking forward to building it, You should market your DS1/Klon btw.
Keep up the good work KDH and love your videos.
p.s - Guitar players are stupid, I just agreed to wait three months for a £100 pedal I have to build myself.
Yes, this is the big point IMO. This pedal sounds fantastic and if assembling it myself to keep the price to $100 is what it takes to get a pretty much identical sounding Klone, while supporting an independent pedal maker who has given a lot of knowledge for free, I'm totally fine with it. If it was a subpar pedal, it would be totally different.
And honestly they probably are not saving anything now with how the blew through the initial 3k kits they had on hand ready to go and had like 20k more preorders after that. They are hiring new people and paying overtime and now are probably paying rush shipping on components too at this point per the video the released like maybe a week later.
The video of the kids building the kits is the best pedal industry video i have ever seen!
Great video as usual! I'm going to feel free to disagree about a certain aspect of your concerns though. "All you get is the ability to say you did it yourself." To a great many people, if this is your first pedal kit, you will actually learn about the components of a pedal and how they interact during the process of putting it together. That learning process without having to solder anything is going to be quite valuable to anyone curious who has never done it before. From little kids all the way up to 40-50 year olds who have only ever bought pedals. For $100, that is really what this kit is for. It is not only an entry to pedals, but an entry to engineering! IMO there is great value there and I would be SUPER stoked to get one of these for Christmas or something.
Building lego isn't hard, but it's fun because you assemble something.
Damn. Not gona lie im probably gonna buy one of those pedals. I like the diy aspect especially the solderless aspect.
it’s fun. that’s all. good price for a pedal and it’s fun to put something simple together. nothing to do with “bragging rights”
it really is a masterclass in marketing.
Its wild how it doesnt work on everyone. They turn me off but Im willing to be they make good products. I cant stand the guy that does their youtube channel.
@@sole__doubt”The guy that does their TH-cam channel”?😅 you mean Josh Heath Scott aka JHS
@@deluxeg Now I know what JHS stands for thanks brother.
Yeeesh, I don't know who manages the closest McDonald's but I won't let that keep me from buying a burger there every now and then.
You’ve missed the point. This is a NOVELTY ITEM. A parody of Ikea. And you get a great sounding pedal in the process.
I'm a special case here in the sense that i plan to powdercoat the casing of my nötaklon and paint my own stuff on it. The pedal being sent unbuilt means i can do all that pre-assembly (which the instructional video states to do any aesthetic changes before assembly to avoid issues.) And i dont have to take the pedal apart beforehand. Im very lazy so i can appreciate that.
I like the 3 series pedals i own, but i cant stand the bland white enclosures and I hope they dont abandon their more creative pedal aesthetic in favor of this all the way.
Your mutilated pedal will will LOSE resale value. This is why joss suggested you do it.
@@F1083 cool.
Don't worry the plain white ones seem to be the signature aesthetic of the 99 dollar pedals
@@F1083 Might be a surprise to you, some people can afford to spend $99 on a fun project and not lose sleep worrying about "resale value".
@F1083 If you’re worried about resale value on a 100 dollar pedal, you may already be priced out of any guitar equipment.
Pedal would have been $200 if they assembled this one. Regarding this could have been in the 3 Series, sure it could have been - and just like the $200 morning glory, superbolt, crayon, etc. The warranty issue isn't a big deal - it is a $99 pedal and also done PCB, I'm sure if there is some major issue they will sort it out. Part of being this big is actually having some customer support. Unlike Bill and his original klons
Have you actually used JHS customer support? I assumed it would be great until I contacted them. My experiences were awful.
Hooey, this is pointless as it’s an excellent pedal at a bargain price. Assembly took less than 15 minutes! Totally dig this tone!
It’s a stocking stuffer. Nice for someone on X-mas morning that wanted a Klon.