Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
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Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: USD 29
Submitted 08/02/2009
at 10:30am
by aw
Ease of Use
:
9
Speed and intensity pots, on/off stomp. You'll know pretty quickly whether or not you like it.
Screw-type battery access isn't my favorite, but one screw certainly beats four. You'll get used to changing the battery on this unit.
Sound Quality
:
8
I don't use a lot of time/pitch-based effects, and therefore don't have a lot of comparative knowledge about what factors make one superior to the other. That said, I'm satisfied with this beast as a cost-effective way to approximate that pulsing Robin Trower feel. Roll off treble, stir in flatted fifths, makes its own sauce...
I primarily play Strats with hot passive single coils. Trower reference notwithstanding, for my own style (which I'll dub "Pre-Van Halen rock") I prefer the sound of a small Fender amp turned up to the point of breakup, as opposed to either the Marshall roar or the modern high-gain, compressed tone.
The Chicken Salad pulses nicely at settings below about +8, then becomes a little too warbly and un-subtle for my taste. Your mileage may vary.
I find that the rotary controls are both nicely linear, so when you only turn the knob a little way, you only get a little change in the sound. Non-linear pots are a pet peeve of mine; they are all too common on inexpensive gear. It's nice to see that these operate smoothly and gradually, on a $29 item. The payoff is that the controls, though simple, can be fine-tuned throughout their full range, without frustrating jumps between knob positions.
Overall, the CS does what I expect it to do, without any serious downside.
Reliability
:
8
Everybody's skeptical about the on/off stomp button. So am I. I'm a light user, though, so I don't require road-warrior build quality.
When I first bought the Chicken Salad, the effect occasionally did not engage when the light indicated that it was on. I swapped the battery (it comes with an old-fashioned Dan-O battery of dubious quality and lifespan) and things were ok again. Not long afterward (say, 2 hours of playing time) the pedal begain to tick in time with the speed control. "Junk!" I declared. But: I swapped the battery, and once again, the bad behavior turned out to have been a false alarm. I learned from all of this that the optional battery eliminator is a sound investment, especially for those of you who plan to use this frequently. The pedal seems to be, as others have noted, a bit of a battery hog. So learn from my stupidity: When you hear ticking, it's not broken. It's just the pedal telling you that it's hungry again, and sooner than you'd have expected -- like a teenager with a tapeworm.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No experience.
Overall Rating
:
8
I have more gear than I would ever admit to my wife, collected over 33 years of playing.
I was scouting vibrato pedals, and was about to shell out $225 or whatever for a Uni-Vibe. Then I came across an online video comparing the Chicken Salad to the Uni-Vibe; I truly couldn't hear much difference. There may in fact be one (perhaps more sophisticated controls, probably increased ruggedness?) but certainly the Dunlop did not sound 7x better. You can judge for yourself; the vid's out there on YouTube.
I'd call it a good value, with the caveat that it does go through 9v batteries at an alarming rate.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: USD 25.00
Submitted 07/28/2009
at 10:18am
by Lonnie 4
Ease of Use
:
7
Very easy to use stock. But to get the best out of the pedal you need to do the trim pot and foil mods. Not too hard, but taking the pedal apart takes some work. So I give it a seven. Once the mods are done, simple to use.
Sound Quality
:
10
Incredible. Gets the Robin Trower tone and the Ritchie Blackmore tone of Catch the Rainbow on the "On Stage" Rainbow album. I love this effect. I can't believe it is only $25 bucks. On the other hand, I had to mod it and I am going to re-house it in an MXR style box to protect it, so it is not that inexpensive taking that into account. But it is worth it. I also put in the diode which fluctuates with the speed. Cool.
Reliability
:
6
Well... I use it right now in a true bypass loop so I don't have to stomp on it. so it is very reliable that way, IF you don't try and use a battery. I tried the battery and it lasted about five minutes. Literally. But it is plastic and has cheap pots, etc.
SO I am going to re-house it with good parts in an MXR type box. Then it should be bullet proof. I got an 8 MM purple diode to fluctuate with the speed. That should make me dizzy all by itself.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No idea, it does not matter. THe day I got it I opened it up and did the mods. So thawt voided the warranty instantly. Cool.
Overall Rating
:
10
This is greaat. I had a Fulltone Mini-Deja Vibe that just sounded weak and I sent it back. You can get five Chicken Salads for one Deja-Vibe. LOL.
The Chicken Salad has a bulb and four photo resistors in a box which emulated the basic concept of the original Univibe. Amazing. $25 bucks. Gets a 10.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: USD 25
Submitted 10/24/2008
at 12:19am
by zoobandblues
Ease of Use
:
8
Theoretically very easy to use speed and intensity. I give it an 8 because that internal trim pot is a bastard to get to but not terribly hard to access. The pedal is sensitive and pulling the guts out and putting them back in can take a toll. Genital hands and patience is what it takes. You really have to listen to the pulse and find good ratio's of speed/intensity to get that vibe sound.
Sound Quality
:
8
I would give it about a 4 out of the box. Tweaking with the trim I give it an 8. To say this thing doesn't suck your tone you must live on another planet. It makes your signal sound a little thin but not too bad. It just takes some low end out of your signal. When using this pedal I run it first. Chicken salad, TS-9 analog/Silver, Keeley Sparkle Drive, Barber Tone Press into Hotrod Deluxe with a U.S. Strat. One thing that gets annoying is that it has to be first in line to get the best sound or else!!!! I found that the trim pot is very sensitive and controls the bias of the pedal. One way you get no effect and the other is all the effect. I found this pedal sounds the best when the trim is set to around 1 to 1:30. Compared to my Megavibe this pedal doesn't respond as well with other pedals and is not as organic and transparent sounding. Think pro baseball stadium (MV)to highschool baseball field(CSV). If tweaked right it does sounds real good and hits more of a phasey sound which I like. Think DSOTM and WYWH/ Hendrix. And yes with the speed around 3:00 or 4:00 and the intensity around 9:00 or 10:00 you can get a cool brain damage/ abbey road rotary sound. It did take me a while to get a perfect ratio of trim/intensity/speed. Just listen to the throb and experiment.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I would use this pedal live but it is plastic and very delicate. I play blues/jazz/fusion and respect my equipment very well but a spade is a spade. The thing I noticed to go in and out with touch sensitivity is the 9v power jack. Batteries don't even think about it, what a drain.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
Other than my Boss CE-2 this was the best $25 I have ever spent on an effects pedal. I got this pedal in waiting for my Megavibe a year ago and I'm still proud of this little thing. My advice is that if you don't have $$$$ to spend on a vibe then get this and tweak the trim. I plan on rehousing this with True-bypass, better pots, and nooooo plastic. I pretty much look at this as a project pedal with unbelievable potential and if lost or broken I would probably buy another b/c of the price. I just hope some one comes up with a mod to get this thing to let your tone shine through a little better. Maybe an opt-amp or something. This pedal can almost get you you there and with a little mod or three I think people would be shocked at what $25 can get. Check out youtube for some sound clips.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/08/2008
at 09:30am
by Bill
Email: lplew<at>insight dot rr dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
After reviewing several Uni-vibe models the Danelectro Chicken Salad for $29 is a bargain!2 knobs and you can tweak your Leslie sound in.There is a manual but really basic picture showing best setting.Mine was new in a box and I believe they came out in 1999.Danelectro has a new Vibe pedal haven't heard it yet.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play blues.Once and awhile an SRV tune comes along and needs that little rotovibe sound!It does a great job at Trower and Hendrix also.
I use the following:Peterson Strobo Stomp 2 (Highly reccommend!),Chicken Salad,DOD FX10 Preamp clean boost,TS-808,Vintage ProCoRat,and Digitech Digidelay.Use 1Spot to power all pedals.No noise from pedal and the lack of no true bypass doesn't affect my tone.All pedals into either Fender Reissue Deluxe Reverb, or Reissue Super Reverb.Like the Chicken Salad in front of all my distortions.Sounds like a real 1960's UniVibe.
Reliability
:
8
The price is so low the box is plastic, knobs delicate(mine came with prtective clear cover I leave on to protect knobs), and I believe button switch is metal.Should hold up if you don't stomp hard.I use it for a couple of songs so no need to have 2 of them.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No.The $29 keeps you from contacting them.Get a new one if it breaks.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
This pedal fills in some of those rotovibe blues sounds along with some great organ like effects when playing rhythm chords.I do like Trower as well and it does nicely!Use a neck pickup, low tone, and the rhythm sounds fill in nicely.Love this pedal for the price!Can't justify $200+ for another model.Wouldn't use all the time like a wah wah or fuzz just adds to your tone.Been playing for over 40 years,use 1991 Gibson Les Paul Standard,a couple of Agile guitars 1956 Les Paul Goldtop with P-90's and SG copy with Gibson Pickups (great great clones when you tweak them with pickups, new pots, etc.)and 2 SX guitars stratocaster and telecaster style also tweaked.Telecaster using Fralin Classic pickups.Wow!I use the knock offs because they are made very well,look like the real thing,made with great woods,and don't worry about them when playing out like my Gibson.I'm also left handed and these are all left handed models.Note I have several pickup combinations on these guitars P-90's, humbuckers, single coils.Plenty of room to experiment for your tone.I've had several Fender amps through the years, various pedals, and other guitars as well.I love the price of the Chicken Salad, sound of it, and especially the fact it does not suck tone from my setup.If you want to try a UniVibe sound try one of these.$29 not $200.This is not the you get what you pay for idea.The pedal is plastic and looks cheap on my pedalboard but there is noe cheap sound.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: USD 18. USED
Submitted 08/21/2007
at 02:09am
by mcqueen
Ease of Use
:
10
Could not be any easier
Sound Quality
:
9
At first I pedal had been way over hyped. Sounded like a very muddy tone killin' phaser?! So, I was gonna scrap it for parts and build something useful...low and behold I found me a trim pot!! She'd been glued in place at the factory- so I popped the glue off and started to reset it and found a beutiful univibe sweet spot at about 2 o'clock on the pot. Now this pedal is worth all the hype and more. Great little SRV kicker know.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Don't know yet.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: USD 15 USED
Submitted 08/05/2007
at 01:17pm
by revomotor
Ease of Use
:
8
Pretty easy to use. 2 knobs, right? How fast and how much. But of course the knobs are small and not so easy to turn. But that's not really so bad, kinda keeps you from overshooting. So, i won't knock it a point for that even though I should.
Sound Quality
:
8
Yeah, you can get some Hendrix types of sounds out of it and on the cheap. Sounds like a messy 4-stage phaser. That's good. I don't know if it is a 4-stage phaser, I'm just saying that's what it sounds like... but deeper and more off-kilter.
The thing about the chicken salad is it sounds a lot different depending on where ya put it. Mine with my rig, anyway... effects loop, cuts a lot of bass. Out of effects loop, doesn't seem to cut as much. Maybe I'm just crazy? Sound different with a power adapter and a battery too. Making no appearance otherwise, you can get some cool sounds from 2 o'clock speeds with a half-dead battery but you have to boost the depth all the way.
Some settings can satisfy your auto-wah cravings pretty well too. Fool around with it.
Even though I gave it an 8, I have to qualify that with an admission that it has kicked some other pedals out of rotation that are prolly 9's. Why? I dunno... this thing just sounds neat.
Reliability
:
8
Well, it's plastic. Never had any problem with mine and I got mine used.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Danelectro? I'll just be political here and say 'no comment'...
Overall Rating
:
9
Got to boost it. Oddball but useful effect. Well worth 20-30 bucks. I recommend it as a 'just for the hell of it' buy.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/02/2007
at 03:50pm
by Marty Priller
Ease of Use
:
10
Two knobs and a switch, how easy is that?
Sound Quality
:
10
You can get a Hendrix / Trower sound with this pedal.Just put the speed around 1 o'clock and the other knob around 3 o'clock and put the pedal before your distortion and you should be close enough to cop the "Bridge Of Sighs" sound.
Reliability
:
7
It's plastic 1st off so if you have a habit of doing the stomp on pedals be careful with this one,also it's better to use an adaptor for this pedal cause this will eat up batteries.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
This pedal has been called a poor man's Univibe and so right they are.It's not a bad pedal if you're into getting that Hendrix/Trower type of sound without spending lots of $$$ for the real thing.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: ??? 20 USED
Submitted 05/02/2007
at 07:17am
by Timm R
Email: timm_ro at web<dot>de
Ease of Use
:
10
Stomp GENTLY on the switch to engage, turn the 2 knobs as you like and dial in 100s of sweet spots. Couldn't be much easier than that.
Sound Quality
:
9
Allright, a pedal for a few bucks in a crappy plastic enclosure with a bad bypass? Hmmm ... what could this sound like? .... FANTASTIC! I've tested some Phaser/Vibe-Clones/and stuff and the Chicken Salad was my Vibe at choice. It sounds fantastic. There's no try to create a new kind of vibe-sound, it's more or less an exact Univibe-copy with THAT great sound.
Only the bypass sounds like a farting dog ;)
Use a True-Bypass-box or rehouse it like i did ...
I would give a 10, but that bypass, man ...
Reliability
:
3
Uargs... Don't even try to stomp it. I don't trust that plastic and even the stompswitch seems like you should stroke it instead of stomping.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
I often use it in combination with my Digitech Synth Wah to create some synth-like spheres. Works great for that! You can use it for fatten your sound up, have a little more myterious wobbling in your sound or to go crazy with a whooshing Vibe ....
If it was built in a more sturdy enclosure and it would have a good sounding bypass I would pay MUCH more for this unit!
You get a huge piece of sound for a little money ... great deal!
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: USD 36.95
Submitted 03/30/2007
at 08:30am
by Chris Gordon
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
9
This is a follow up. I meant to say I have owned 13 different choruses, 7 different flangers and 4 phasers. For modulation I have settled on a flanger as it is my favourite and now I have added this.
I have noticed that if you set the Intensity to 3'oclock and the speed to 12 o'clock you get realy nice Jimi sounds with for some reason with an enhanced layer of treble over the top. If you put the speed to 3 o'clock also it seems to become darker sounding. I have a theory that the higher speed means the light inside doesn't get a chance to become as bright as it does when more slowly ramped up. This effects the tone of the unit.
With the 12 / 3 settings I give it a 8.9
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
Everyone makes a chorus, everyone makes an overdrive, but not everyone makes a Uni-vibe. The fact that this vibe pedal exists, combined with the affordability provided the only reason for owning a Dano mini pedal. I would not bother with any other dano mini pedal because it violates the different pedals rule. I am however finding the cheapness of this pedal hard to live with and may buy a Voodoo Lab Micro Vibe. In any event this has been a great introductory pedal to check out the uni-vibe type of sound with my own playing.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/28/2007
at 06:47am
by Chris Gordon
Ease of Use
:
8
Mine came in a box, you have to be able to open a box which is not too hard. Then the pedal is plugged in however first you must work out how to take the back off to install the included battery or else use a power supply which I highly recommend.
Two knobs which need to be used from a minimum of around 11 o'clock on-wards. These are small but even with the plastic guard on you can turn them easily.
Sound Quality
:
8
Sound is good, no hiss or hum through a loud gainy amp, no tone sucking when bypassed. Makes a small pop when turning on. I plugged into my amp direct, then through all my pedals and it doesn't sound like tone is being sucked out. If this was a little tone sucker as some people have said (mine can be with bad power to) then I would put it on eBay toot sweet.
I may still sell it as I am not sure I like the sound of it. It is a little like some of the tones Jimi Hendrix and Robin Trower used to get. Robin still gets em but from a Fulltone Deja 'Vibe 2. I am not sure the Fulltone is better than a Mojo Vibe personally. I am not spending the cash for either of those when this thing kind of does similar things and also given that I'm not too excited by this type of effect over my Nady Flanger. The two or not alike of course.
It is like you might get a flanger or a chorus. You might try the Boss one and go yeah thats great. You may try more than one flanger or chorus and say I like this one a bit more because of this or that. I have had about The thing is if you like a type of effect you may kind of pursue that line of musical thought. Well this little pedal is the Uni-vibe type of effect. It is not the same as other 'vibes say Voodoo Labs, Fulltone, etc, but it is this type of sound.
********************************************************************
YOU NEED TO USE A GOOD POWER SUPPLY!! i.e. a regulated 9V DC supply.
********************************************************************
Don't talk about noise when used after a distortion pedal or weird tone sucking when bypassed because that means you don't have a good power supply. Other pedal may work fine but this one really suffers when the voltage drop below 9 volts. This means if you load up your small power supply, for example I was using a 200mA supply. I was running wah, distortion, flanger, tuner, delay no problems. When adding the Chicken it didn't like the low voltage. I put on a 1A supply and it is happy. With the smaller supply I had every bad thing listed in these reviews happening and then some!
Reliability
:
8
I have a rule about pedals, well three rules. One, they must all be different brands (to give different shapes, sizes colors) and two they must be metal cased. Three they can't be Boss because they tend to sound like crap, and are overpriced cheap pieces of crap. The only pedal I ever had die was my first one, a Boss BF-2 Flanger with a silver screw.
So this pedal breaks a rule but it is one of the few 'vibe pedals you can buy and clearly the only one you can buy to try the effect out. I was almost going to buy a Mojo Vibe as I believe they are the best but then I just got a better power supply and this pedal began to shine. I have a Kaden Effects Fluttertone on the way so I may not use this 'vibe pedal as the tremolo should just goes up and down in volume without tonal or pitch changes whereas this pedal changes the tone and the pitch and is a bit nasty overall but I think it is supposed to be. The uni-vibe was a dreadful thing, it sucked tone, it added distorions and effected all sorts of things but that made it sound a certain way.
About the plastic case. It is such a tiny unit that it probably is very tough. I made my plastic rule after purchasing a Behringer tuner pedal which I returned due to it being as weak as piss physically. I don't think this is as bad as all that.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
7
This is a druggie sounding pedal and it is best used when you have had a few cones and are feeling very mellow or at least when you are wanting to have that sort of effect on the listener. Since I don't smoke dope I kind of don't like this pedal as much as I thought I might.
It has some pretty great sounds with intensity nearly but not actually on full with the speed on around 3-4 o'clock. When you play with some amp overdrive it nails bridge of sighs if you use your imagination a bit, and it definitely refuses to get too revved up in terms of playing speed.
It is definitely a strum the chord and feel the vibe type pedal. If you want to play a little quicker through things I would strongly suggest a flanger. When you play slow a flanger gives the spacial quality that this has without the harsh stoned feeling, and when you want to play faster rhythms it adds sparkle. This one is like you took a handful of Valium on an empty stomach.
I give it a 7, it's a good sound, it works, I don't think it's the be all and end all and I don't think you could buy worse because this is the bottom end of the market. Things can only improve from here but it definitely gets you 70% of the way so I give it a 7/10
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: Euro 25
Submitted 09/28/2006
at 05:31am
by jan
Ease of Use
:
10
Two knobs: Intensity and speed.
Could hardly be any more simple.
Sound Quality
:
9
The sound actually has nothing to do with chicken.
It is supposed to be a UniVibe clone and is quite good at that for the very little money (in comparison with most of the other vibe/leslie pedals).
I tested it against a VooDoo Labs Micro Vibe and the main difference was that the Micro was noisier and the Dano more intense !
It sounds very much like Dave Gilmour`s guitar on "Dark Side of the Moon" ("Breathe") or Robin Trower on his 70ies records ("Bridge of sighs"). Maybe Hendrix at Woodstock is the prime example.
Clean, you can set the two controls to around 12 o`clock to acchieve a very musical vibe. With distortion (preferably before !) you may need to turn up to maximum depth.
I play this kind of retro stuff in cover bands, so I am grateful to get an excellent UniVibe-imitation for ...
say about 200 bucks less :-)
I`m going to rate it 9, as I know there are still these best-sounding legendary old ones out there that I can`t afford.
Reliability
:
7
Hmmm. Made of plastic, so I wouldn`t dare to step onto it with my whole body weight.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
Worth the money. Sounds just good.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: USD 60
Submitted 09/23/2006
at 02:17pm
by Kyle
Ease of Use
:
10
2 knobs. enough said
Sound Quality
:
9
i havent tried leslie or those other "holy grails" of vibrato so i cant compare. i really like it. only one issue, when you step on the button, it makes a very silent click sound out your amp. i think a noice gate would fix this tho...i need to get one too...hmmmm
Reliability
:
7
im really iffy on this. its plastic (thick tho..), small knobs, battery sucker, and sometimes im scared im going to push the switch in under the plastic like those laser pointers. so far no flaws. as long as you dont stom the shit the out of it (which you have no rason to unless youre jumping around like crzy....learn not to), its perfectly alright. try to use a power brick.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
cheap. great sound. easy to work with. decent structure. what more do you want?
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: US $30
Submitted 06/27/2006
at 10:09am
by Jimmy Blazer
Ease of Use
:
10
Two knobs - intensity and speed - self explanatory. No manual supplied or needed.
Sound Quality
:
8
I run a Ibanez GAX 70 and JS100 into a little Marshall MGDFX15 and various Digitech and Boss pedals. I demoed this pedal straight into the amp. Couldn't get a really good sound with the GAX, but when I switched it over to the JS100, the sound and tone drastically improved (no wonder). The CS is remarkably quiet for a pedal this small, no real noise issues here. Takes a minimal amount of tweaking to coax usable sounds out of it. I bought it mainly to get Bridge of Sighs - Hendrix and Dark Side era Pink Floyd sounds, and this little thing can get them all! I give it an 8, cause nothing is worth a 10.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Read some negative things on its reliability before buying it which made me a little suspect. Decided to take a chance, and so far so good. Only got it last week. It seems these things either work or don't, no middle ground. Gotta be lucky I guess. Don't bother using it with batteries, AC adapter is the only way. I use it with one of those Godlyke adapters.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Bought it online from Music Sales 123. Excellent support and follow-up. Never dealt with Danelectro on this or before. I suppose if it broke, I would try and get it repaired, but for the $30.00, is it worth the hassle?
Overall Rating
:
8
I play classic rock - Hendrix/Trower/Pink Floyd/Cream - works well with these styles. I got back into playing about two years ago, after a long layoff. Own the Digitech Hendrix, RP300, DF7 and Digidelay pedals. Boss pedals include the Auto Wah, CS2, BF1 pedals. Tried the Dunlop Univibe SC1 - but for $150.00, was too rich for a one dimensional pedal, I mean how many songs are you going to use it with before it becomes too much? The Chicken Salad is great for messing around with, without a huge investment.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: US $30
Submitted 01/10/2006
at 08:22pm
by Jerry2a
Email: jerry2a at gmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
7
Easy to use - two knobs.
Sound Quality
:
6
OK, if you want to use this thing with distortion or overdrive, you've GOT to put it BEFORE any overdrive pedals in your FX chain. If you're using your amp's overdrive/distortion, plug it directly into your input jack and don't use the FX loop. Clean, it actually sounds pretty good. It's NOT a Univibe, but it gets some pretty nice tones. It's a little whooshy but not bad. If you like the Univibe sound but don't want to shell out the money for one (or a clone), this isn't a bad pedal. I can get some Hendrix/Trower sounds out of it - I don't think it does a very good SRV for some reason...That could just be me. Personally I think it's completely useless when placed after an OD/distortion pedal...Unless you're going for a wild effect.
Reliability
:
5
Be careful, OK? The switch probably isn't as delicate as it appears, but tread lightly anyway. The knobs that Danelectro uses are a joke - they come off pretty easily and they're so small I can see losing one eventually. I'm not using mine anymore but I'd probably get a backup if I depended on it for my sound.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
6
It's not bad. I wish it had more range in terms of speed, but for $30 I've heard worse. I love playing around w/ effects pedals...Been playing for 25 years and I've owned a bunch since I bought my first Ibanez Phaser back in the early 80's. I think Danelectro is awesome for making cheap pedals like this - they're a little flimsy and the sounds aren't always the best, but for a very small investment you can buy something cool without worrying about the price tag if it turns out you don't like it or use it very often. I own the Tuna Melt tremelo and it's GREAT.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: 40 (EUR)
Submitted 10/08/2005
at 06:55am
by Masked Marvel
Ease of Use
:
10
Couldn't get much simpler - two knobs!
Sound Quality
:
4
I absolutely agree with the person posting before me: It's two dimensional and it sucks tone (the highs when activated. It's no fun except when looking for a cheap "some sort of" vibe sound, but it's not good at all for you effect chain, so I can not use it whatsoever.
If you are looking for a decent vibe sound go and buy the Sweet Sound Mojo Vibe (unfortunately you can't buy it in Europe...), if that's too expensive, go with the Rocktron Vertigo! When looking for a leslie kind of sound, the Dano Rocky Road (with modification) is absolutely amazing!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I'm not going to find out - I'm selling this one as soon as possible.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never used till now.
Overall Rating
:
4
It's no good - it's as simple as that. Even when looking for a more subtle vibe sound, I recommend the Dunlop Rotovibe and not this little tone sucker!
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: US FREE
Submitted 09/08/2005
at 09:14pm
by Calvin Villark
Ease of Use
:
10
The wonderful effect that is "vibe" (or, specifically, univibe) is not a complicated effect, but here it is bare bones basic. 2 knobs, neither of which have much sweep. Basically, it's on or it's off, and that's it.
It's below no-brainer level. You actually don't need a brain to use it. Though ears will be useful to hear how underwhelming it is.
Sound Quality
:
4
Soundwise, this is a just barely usable effect pedal:
IF you have nothing else available, you COULD use this pedal to add a little life and movement to your sound. Most useful on lower, almost-not-there settings, just impressing a little life. Best on guitar. A little too stiff on keys, but some tasty guitar playing brings out the sparse usefulness of this little discount job.
BUT -- if you've heard other (almost universally nicer) vibe pedals, THIS one will blow you away with its inferior and blah tone. First, it's not really THAT vibe sound so obsessively sought. Second it's not organic enough, like a nice modulation pedal should be. Third, for a cheap effect pedal, even if the precious tone isn't there, you should get enough control to make something unearthly or odd out of it, but not so here: the controls are just too limited. Doesn't get REALLY slow or REALLY fast, NO regen, just very middle of the road.
Lastly, it sucks (tone, and, well, in general) in a line of stomp boxes. The best I got from it was used all by itself. Blurry and dull in a line of FX. Actually has a LoFi charm, just not nearly enough to keep it in the mix, for me at least. YMMV.
Technically, it's usable, but offers very little else in any department. Honestly, dimed it sounds really cheap. Used with subtle effect, it is, I guess, OKAY. Most everything sounds better though. Recommended only for those on the slimmest of budgets.
It works. Just not well...
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I have a bunch of other mini-pedas by danelectro, and they're all still hanging in there, though I wouldn't go abusing it. BTW, some of their other pedals are great! (see: BLT, Fabtone, Fish & chips)
But who knows what could happen down the road...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never bothered them.
Overall Rating
:
1
It's just ok. I got it for free, it's not bad if you have nothing else. I'm kind of a stomp box fanatic, and while some of these low-priced danos are really good, I never use this. Never. It's just not very good. So... what can I say.
Dull, but on a desert island I wouldn't throw it away. If you have a newer amp with built in effects, you've heard the quality you'll get here. Actually recent amps have superior fx, so... try it, you might buy it, you might use it.... and... you'll probably just buy something nicer.
For twice the price, and still quite cheap, you can get a MXR Phase 90. A much better pedal. Actually, for a little more dough, you can get a lot of better pedals. Modulation, when it's good, it's worth it.
Low score, for honesty's sake. Get only if you're in desparate need and have not another cent for a better pedal.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: US $30
Submitted 02/18/2005
at 03:13pm
by Kalaab
Ease of Use
:
8
Two knobs, how hard could it be? Although it does bear mentioning that the only way you'll really be able to discern this effect from any other subtle modulation effect. With the intensity past about 1:00, the effect shows its personality a bit more.
Sound Quality
:
8
I wanted to get a washed-out rotary sound for a decent price, and that's pretty much what I got. I don't think it compares to a univibe by any means, but it is rather effective at getting that dreamy, modulated Hendrix sound a la 'Machine Gune'. However, I wouldn't count on it to trick discerning Univibe fans, because they sound similar but by no means close.
As I mentioned earlier, the sound is rather nondescript until you turn the intensity beyond the 1:00 point. Then it becomes much more pronounced. I suppose you could liken this sound to an extremely mellow chorus or phase, although I hear nuances present in the Chicken Salad that are not typically present in those effects. It oscillates, warbles, and throbs, and it does it without staining your instrument's tone. It adds a lot of transparent color that can be as subtle or pronounced as you want it to be, which makes it a very usable effect.
The thing I like about this series of pedals is that all of the Dano Minis have such strong personalities, far too strong to be likened to any other pedal. The Chicken Salad Vibrato is no exception, and it delivers reasonably unique tones.
Reliability
:
5
Questionable. Right out of the box, the unit seemed a little flighty. I had to coax it a bit to get the effect to engage, but after it turned on it seemed to stay on correctly. I play exclusively in a home studio, so die-hard reliability isn't a primary issue, but I was a bit put off by the fact that it was seemingly on the fritz right out of the box.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
*shrugs*
Overall Rating
:
7
I love the Minis. This pedal makes a really cool and useable rotary speaker sound for just a little bit of dough. If you've wanted to experiment with the Roto/Uni/whatever-vibe sound, check it out.
Remember though, this pedal's sound is too unique to replace any of those devices. I won't be trading my Rocktron Vertigo in for it, but it does make sounds that the Vertigo cannot.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: US $30
Submitted 06/14/2004
at 01:56pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
2
easy to use until it breaks
Sound Quality
:
1
sounds great until it breaks
Reliability
:
No Opinion
i can't depend on it, cause it's broken
Customer Support
:
1
i'm outside of warranty. cheaper to buy a new one
than to ship this one back.
Overall Rating
:
1
this thing sounds great till it breaks.
then it doesn't sound like anything.
just because it's inexpensive doesn't mean it
has to be CHEAP. a/c adapter plug sh!t the bed,
then the whole thing gave up the ghost.
consider this a "consumable" and you'll be fine.
an investment it's not.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: US $9.99
Submitted 06/07/2004
at 04:31pm
by Pink Jimi Photon
Email: phatjbp<at>aol dot com
Ease of Use
:
8
no manual, tho sometimes there's a "settings" chart in the box...
nice univibe style effect, i use it just after my wah and before overdrive (boss sod), works real well....but only when hooked to a wart.
mine won't run on batteries for more than a minute or two before it fucks up....if it works at all!!
extreme settings sound ok, most useable sounds seem to be near the center of the pots, ya gotta kinda crank the intensity.
sounds just like Hendrix sometimes... amazing for such a cheap piece of shit!
Sound Quality
:
8
the sound quality, for the price, is amazingly good...no true bypass, seems to colour some gtrs a little even off.
when the power supply fucks up, it can oscilate in a MOST irritating way....
usually unplugging/replugging the input jack and power supply jack cures it.
nice chewy watery tone, very phasey and acidic.
can sound almost like a leslie a little.
lotta bang for the buck!
it LOVES my Marshalls, sounds a little wek in over driven fenders, but great for nailing that robin Trower Bridge Of sighs tone with a clean amp.
remarkably un-touch responsive....
can modulate feedback real nicely.
adds some high-end presence and a touch of compression when on, prolly cuzza the opto electronics used in the pedal's circuit.
nice box, for a cheap cheesy piece of shit.
Reliability
:
5
yah, reasonably dependable.....until it fucks up, and IT WILL, in my experience....
won't run well on ANY battery i've tried, and if ya do run it with a battery, when it dies, the pedal that appears to use some kinda transistorized bypass switching will sometimes stay like half on or something, so even tho it LOOKS off, it's not.
PAIN INNA ASS!!!
i run it with a wart, ALWAYS....and even then, every couple gigs i gotta mess with it..like alotta othe dano pedals i've tried, will do some weird shit sometimes, like the switching scenario i just described.
but hey the price is right!!
but i wouldn't use this pedal for anything it'll get too much abuse from....
plastic will break, and i've seen some of these dano's circuit boards break internally from over earnest stompers.
gives a whole new meaning to "step and crush"
Customer Support
:
2
Called them once, back when i tried one of them fuckin' horrible pastrami diode clippers....
was pickin up radio waves from Mars, and wanted to know if they'd had similar complaints,the sucked, and were rude and arogant, seemed put off that someone would question their shitty circuit design.
i think these things would be far better in a metal enclosure, both for durability and sound, metal would shield thes things from alotta interference.
anyways, i thought their customer support was rather lame.
Overall Rating
:
8
i play classic rock and blues, gibsons and fender guitars, marshall and fender amps depending on gig and mood.
i actually like this pedal, it's a keeper despite it's flaws.
wish it had a control voltage jack so ya could sweep the mod time like a vibe, but hey, ya can't have EVERYTHING, LOL!!!
sounds good, works ok, very usable tones, and at $9.99, the price was DEFINITELY right!
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: US $25
Submitted 07/11/2003
at 09:02am
by CraigJC
Ease of Use
:
10
This pedal is so simple a monkey could use it well.
Sound Quality
:
3
Here's why I'm writing a review. I can't believe that the review by Anonymous at 11/24/2002 said that it's not a true bypass but it doesn't alter your tone. I LOVED the way it sounded with the vibrato on - just what I was looking for - and dirt cheap. Then I turned it off. Thought something was wrong with my guitar. When I unplugged the pedal went back to my original setup, my guitar tone returned. This pedal ALTERS YOU GUITAR'S TONE even when it's OFF - and I mean a BIG alteration. It will turn a Les Paul into a Kay. Maybe I got a lemon.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I've used it once.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't tried support. Maybe I should.
Overall Rating
:
4
Great for a studio effect to fill a track, but I can't handle the major tone loss I'm getting.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 07/03/2003
at 09:33am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Just updating my earlier review dates 5/14/03
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
I couldn't figure out why this thing sounded so much better with the adjustable Radio Shack Transformer than any other 9V tranformer I would hook up. I finally got out the meter and measure the output voltage on the tranformer. BIG SURPRISE! It was delivering about 11.5V on the 9V setting. In fact every setting was delivering more voltage than stated. Now I need to find out if I'm damaging the Vibrato Pedal running at 11.5V. I certainly hope not because it really has a brighter more open sound at this voltage. Almost chorus like.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: 160 R$ (58 USD)
Submitted 06/04/2003
at 03:45pm
by Rogerio Lins
Email: none
Ease of Use
:
9
Very easy to use, but it loose one point for the name. Dano folks should rename it to Chicken Salad VIBE,
since it doesn't sound like a true pitch vibrato.
Sound Quality
:
8
It nails the Univibe sound. Put before your fuzz for Trower and after for Hendrix. I have mine last in line, after a Big Muff. No noise added, but any hiss caused by other pedals (like a cranked compressor) will shrill in the background.
Some have noticed a little treble and output boost. The treble part is true, but it doesn't add volume, only make you sound more full in all frequencies.
Reliability
:
7
I can depend on it, and I never bring backup.
The plastic case is sturdy and Dano suplies a protector for the Knobs.
But here is the reason why I dicide to submit this review:
Some have have noticed that it eats bateries. Thats not true!!!!
It will indeed suck the bateries that Danelectro suplies with, the "Vintage Power Source". Those are carbon-zinc bateries based on obsolet desing. STICK WITH ALCALINES AND YOU WILL BE FINE!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
A real Bang for the Buck! A great univibe clone for 1/4 price of the Voodoo Las and 1/8 of the Dunlop.
This unit is suited for any mellow tune playing clean, and for wierd/experimental when drived hard. Love the sound and the price.
If it was stolen right now I would buy it again. Of course there are better units. I really loved the Sweet Sound Ultravibe but for now I'm not willing to cash 300 bucks on a effect. If Wish it had a foot switch out to control the speed like the Dunlop and the Ultravibe, but thats not realy a issue.
Overal a great product.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: US $30
Submitted 05/14/2003
at 10:00am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
2 pots, pretty simple
Sound Quality
:
8
Great clean sounds through both my 100W Lee Jackson/Ampeg, and 15W Fender Blues JR. with vintage strats, and new deluxe strat. Kind of chorus like with slight boost. I set the Intensity between 9-11 o'clock, and the speed 10-1 o'clock. Forget using with high gain unless your looking for something outer limits like.
Seems very touchy to voltage changes. Sounds good with 9V battery for about 10 minutes. Bought the Dano power pack (rated 9.6V) and sounded awful, very harsh. Went back to using and universal adjustable transformer I think I got from Radio Shack years ago, and it sounds great @ 9V, 300 miliamps, just like the first 10 minutes of battery life.
Experiment if using other effects. I've noticed some swoshing noise in downline effects when pedal is off.
Reliability
:
8
Seems sturdy for the size. Would keep an eye on dano postings to see if the switch holds up.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
haven't hat to try yet
Overall Rating
:
9
For $30 you can't go wrong if you play clean tube amps. Just seems to fill up the empty spaces. Would definately replace. Would like it if it sounded good with the Dano power pack.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: FREE! (I it got off a friend)
Submitted 03/15/2003
at 07:34am
by John McInnes
Email: Columbo_the_legend<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
8
Boy howdy its easy, set Speed and Intensity and Stomp (be gentle) To small to close your eyes and put foot down as you'll probabilly hit the speed turner
Sound Quality
:
8
Stagg Flying V>>>AXL Tube Overdrive>>>Dano Chicken Salad>>>AXL Flanger>>>Kustom 20W 2 channel. Virtual bypass. Not got a gain boost of any kind. Pretty good effect off it all the time. I can nail the Bridge in "Can't stop" using this (Where fruiscate uses a vibrato) I also use it as a chorus pedal for now untill i get one. The sounds is terrible when the battery is low, it sounds distorted or something
Reliability
:
7
I'd depend on it, mainly cos i only use power supplys for my pedals. This little monster eats batterys for breakfast. I got curiose as to how stong the plastic is, i jumped on it from 3 foot (I say jump, i mean stamp) and it still works, i heard a snap of some kind but theres no damage on it, still i probably wouldn't go without a back-up
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
considering it is free its is pretty sweet. but since it was free i'd not buy another one, i'd get a marshall vibratem or something as its more solidly built and can dial in more variables. I use the intensity at about 3 O'Clock turning point and speed at 1 O'clock turning point. I wish it had a true bypass and a metal body but its quite novel as it is.
Product: Danelectro DJ-15 Chicken Salad Vibrato
Price Paid: US $28
Submitted 02/22/2003
at 06:36pm
by Daniel
Ease of Use
:
10
Super easy to use. Speed and Intensity knobs. Manual give one setting, but it's actually the best one
Sound Quality
:
8
Sounds amazing clean. Wooshing everywhere. Pink Dloyd never sounded this close.
On overdrive, don't even think about using this unless you want really weird experimental sounds.
But the clean is amazing considering the price
Reliability
:
7
Switch is iffy. I don't really like that design and its a small...Afraid i would crush it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them
Overall Rating
:
9
Very cool..especially for 28.00 Definitely would buy again!!
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