Never played any klon clone. I might have to get one and discover what the hype is. But I just orded the Behringer 69 Vibe at the moment. Been wanting a univibe for a while.
@@guitarstuffstudio oh hell, I can outfit an entire band with ten grand. Including drums and clothes and beer. Skip the clothes and beer, and we can do a full recording rig instead, all you need is a place to play.
I'm just surprised it took them this long. Honestly, I think they may have missed the boat. The market is totally saturated with those things now. The REAL question is, what will be the *next* obscure, slightly-different piece of gear that some famous player uses on a hit record, so every idiot with a soldering iron or a little cash in their pocket just HAS to make a copy of it or own one? Figure that out and you'll be able to retire sooner than you planned. 🤣
Most of the cloning happened in the 1990-2010 range. Nothing is new under the sun. The diy pedal forums dissected the klon and the Chinese had klones out in 2 weeks.
@@Deneteus Yeah, I mean to someone who knows their stuff (not me) pedal electronics just aren't that complicated. Apparently that's why you can't patent the actual circuits; they're so simple, just standard parts re-arranged. I'm just amazed this many pedal companies can stay in business. Who the hell is buying all these hundreds of slightly different overdrive pedals? lol
@DogSlobberGardens-i7f They can't patent the circuits because the design was already given away for free years ago by the people that design the parts themselves. Every part comes with a data sheet and example circuits. Whole libraries of books were created during the telecom days. You can only Copywrite a new innovative use of a part in a circuit, or a new part.
@@Deneteus the pedal boom started before that, but yeah, I'm sure the pandemic was a big boost for any company making instruments and accessories. Good point. And thanks for clearing up the thing about patents. I only know what I learned from watching a couple vids by pedal guys like JHS and Wampler.
I just ordered a JHS notaklon
Thanks for watching. Klon clone. There, I'm done.
Never played any klon clone. I might have to get one and discover what the hype is. But I just orded the Behringer 69 Vibe at the moment. Been wanting a univibe for a while.
Why would anyone want to spend £10k to sound like Mark Tremonti 😂
Imagine the other gear you could buy with 10 grand tho???
@@guitarstuffstudioBuchla limited edition Music Easel 😆 boop beep Behringer Enigma for me!
I'd cough up ten bucks to NOT sound like him, that's about it.
@@guitarstuffstudio oh hell, I can outfit an entire band with ten grand. Including drums and clothes and beer. Skip the clothes and beer, and we can do a full recording rig instead, all you need is a place to play.
IMO, this is a TC Electronics Zeus in a new enclosure… and no fat switch.
TC Electronic is owned by Behrenger.
@@hasseltoft Yep! That's why I mentioned it ;) I have the Zeus... I think it's one of the top Klon clones.
I'm to poor to tone chase🤣🤣🤣
Ibanez tube screamer 👍👍✌️
I've been klonned out. Tube screamer for me.
People seem to forget that the Tube Screamer was the Klon of the 80s and early 90s. Vastly over-hyped and over-used.
I'm just surprised it took them this long. Honestly, I think they may have missed the boat. The market is totally saturated with those things now.
The REAL question is, what will be the *next* obscure, slightly-different piece of gear that some famous player uses on a hit record, so every idiot with a soldering iron or a little cash in their pocket just HAS to make a copy of it or own one?
Figure that out and you'll be able to retire sooner than you planned. 🤣
Most of the cloning happened in the 1990-2010 range. Nothing is new under the sun. The diy pedal forums dissected the klon and the Chinese had klones out in 2 weeks.
@@Deneteus Yeah, I mean to someone who knows their stuff (not me) pedal electronics just aren't that complicated. Apparently that's why you can't patent the actual circuits; they're so simple, just standard parts re-arranged.
I'm just amazed this many pedal companies can stay in business. Who the hell is buying all these hundreds of slightly different overdrive pedals? lol
@DogSlobberGardens-i7f All of the people that started playing during the pandemic.
@DogSlobberGardens-i7f They can't patent the circuits because the design was already given away for free years ago by the people that design the parts themselves. Every part comes with a data sheet and example circuits. Whole libraries of books were created during the telecom days. You can only Copywrite a new innovative use of a part in a circuit, or a new part.
@@Deneteus the pedal boom started before that, but yeah, I'm sure the pandemic was a big boost for any company making instruments and accessories. Good point. And thanks for clearing up the thing about patents. I only know what I learned from watching a couple vids by pedal guys like JHS and Wampler.