DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
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Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/22/2009
at 03:46am
by Lewis hamilton
Email: fendermadlewis<at>hotmail dot co dot uk
Ease of Use
:
8
This pedal has four mian controls. They all work like they should, but the high knob would be much better if it rolled of the realy high frequencies alowing you to tame the harsh sound of this pedal.
The pots jump alot and don't change the sound evenly as you move them at all up or down.
Sound Quality
:
4
My gear consists of:
Fender 50th Americain deluxe strat with 50s repro pickups
Fender custom shop tele with s/duncan '59 and jazz Humbuckers
Parts Esquire - 80s '52 reissue neck, alder body. 54 Duncan Pickup
Effects- home modded crybaby, home modded Boss CS-3, T-rex Gristle king, Barber Ltd sr, Crunch Box, EH small clone, Ernie Ball Volume Pedal
Amps - 1982 Mesa Boogie mark II or, Laney 1969 Super group Head.
This pedal gives that searing marshall tone fair enough. Which is what it is designed to do. But it also clouds the tone. even with the gain a 0, It's hard to determine what kind of instrument you are using from another. This would be forgivable for a pedal in this price range,.... but.... i can't abide to a pedal that sounds HARSH! It has a nasty, buzzing top end that just make me cringe, it's so brittle sounding. It is also really noisy when on!!!
Quick lesson: People that say they must have True bypass are often misguided. Pedals that don't have true bypass tend to have a buffer circut. This helps the signal go through long cables without losing clarity. This, in most cases does not change your tone in the BIG way people say it does (with the exeption of some wah pedals)
So, the truth is that True bypass does n't really matter a huge amount, SO LONG as the ouput buffer in the pedal doesn't change your tone! This pedal, however does change your tone when it's on and off! I know for sure by using a true bypass looper.
Reliability
:
10
It seems to be quite tough. I have a spare pedal board for those rough gigs and jams, a lot of guitar players go through it, at home jam sessions and at gigs. This one was on that board for years, and never set a foot wrong! so yes it gets full marks here
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never had any problems
Overall Rating
:
6
I have bought, sold and kept HUNDREDS of pedals! And only the best sounds i can get actually go on my own pedal board. This is NOT one of them.
Over all its a really, really nasty sounding pedal, but i am used to higher quality. At this price it does the job for anyone on a budget. But, if your after a realy good tone, save up another 20 bucks, get an M.I Audio Crunch box (about $85 second hand) You will not regret it!
Email me with any questions I???m always available - fendermadlewis@hotmail.co.uk
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/30/2009
at 03:05pm
by stratomaster
Ease of Use
:
10
It's pretty drop dead simple, each nob says what it does and then you have a giant stomp box button.
Sound Quality
:
7
Good for humbuckers but it's really hard to dial in a good sound with single coils. Very Marshall like sound. Can be very heavy on the gain or can be gain with a bit of crunch for a brighter bluesy attack to the sound. Sound is very hard to dial in a good mix between highs and lows though. If you use a Gibson with humbuckers, and a Marshall amp it'll probably work good for you. Works well with my Ibanez RG350 with the gain on 11! lol but on my Strats and Tele it's just weak, clangy and thin. I will say though it's not entirely the pedal because my amp does suck so keep that in mind!(I use a 83 Traynor Bloc100g)
Reliability
:
No Opinion
This thing is built like a tank, I love Digitech's pedals they're just amazing quality and this is no different. This pedal could probably withstand being run over by my car!.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Digitech does it how I like it make a product you never have to get help with!
Overall Rating
:
8
I play a ranging style, mostly ska, metal, and rock/hard rock. I've been playing for 5 and a half years and this is my third distortion pedal. I've compared it to more distortion pedals then I can remeber but as I've changed back to a mainly single coil sound my love for this pedal has deminished a bit. I love everything about this pedal it just doesn't want to work in my rig for all my guitars. This is a great pedal and I recomend trying it and comparing it to a bunch of different pedals because it's all about what you like.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/02/2009
at 07:47pm
by Kendall Weaver
Ease of Use
:
8
Not the simplest pedal in the world to dial in, but even the most difficult dirt boxes in the world are still remarkably simple to work with. I haven't even so much as looked at the manual, and I probably never will.
Sound Quality
:
6
Right now I'm running this, along with a couple of other pedals, in between a custom guitar (loosely based on a Les Paul) equipped with Bare Knuckle Nailbomb humbuckers and a Mesa/Boogie Mark 1. With the knobs turned just right I absolutely LOVE the tone of this pedal, unfortunately with those settings I get so much noise and hum it makes it pretty much useless. The noise with the level and gain turned way up is bad enough that I can't clean it up with any noise reduction pedal and have any sustain left at all. I did clean it up with the ISP ProRackG noise reduction system, but just barely. The other decent setting I get from this is much lower gain and has very little noise, unfortunately this setting doesn't sound nearly as good as any decent overdrive I've ever used.
I was rather impressed with this pedal when used with a Roland Jazz Chorus though. Each knob had a much broader usable range, however I still ended up having noise issues with the higher gain settings.
Reliability
:
9
I've not had any issues and I can't really imagine anything happening to it. It seems built well enough and I'm generally very easy on my pedals.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've never dealt with Digitech so I can't comment here.
Overall Rating
:
7
I generally play hard rock and picked this up on a whim because I found it lightly used at a bargain price. It certainly matches what I do very well, but is rather lacking compared to other products. The big upside to this pedal is the price. Even new it's still WAY cheap, so it scores points here.
As mentioned the only real issue I have is the noise. It's not the best sounding box in the world but I'm not going to complain based on the price.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/18/2008
at 01:48pm
by mike
Ease of Use
:
8
Once you find the sweet spot it's a case of keeping the settings there... wich is how most people tend to use pedals... this pedal can be trebly, but just roll off the tone on yer geetar (thats what it's there for)
Sound Quality
:
9
A great pedal, a good amount of gain, and much hotter than a boss ds-1... i'm using it with a les pual copy and a 100w marshall, i am SICK AND TIRED of people with crap guitars and amps critisising GOOD pedals like this.
Reliability
:
10
yes.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
no
Overall Rating
:
10
It's a fine pedal, very cheap and worth getting if you want lots of gain... i have four other distortion/fuzz/overdrive pedals, and this is one iv'e recently come back to using as my main distortion pedal... seems to be a pedal that begginers tend to buy and then give bad reviews about, Hint: i'd look at the quality of your guitar and amp (and maybe playing skills)... before you write this pedal off.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/11/2008
at 01:05pm
by Oddballs
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Just a follow-up, two years later.
Mixer out very useful, when using the HH in a true bypass looper (passive unit) you can have a tighter sound and still a normal clean bypass.
No noise, effective eq, and very usable gain knob.
Sound Quality
:
10
As stated before, basically more a Santana pedal than a Metallica one, sweet and on the softer side. Not much precision in fast attack playing overall. It is better through the mixer out, tighter.
But I have found my way with the HH, and it is dead simple: gain knob all the way, and my guitar's vol pot governs the ship beautifully.
A strat clone with two kinmans, and telecaster simple switching. Just a simple master volume, nothing else (no cap on it either.
So at 2 I have a very convincing crunch, with guts and definition. At 5 blues soloing is addictive, still guts and definition, and it sings warmly. At 7 with bridge pup and a strong attack a way good hard rock/nearly metal rythm sound, and at 10 a lush single notes solo sound, with tons of sustain and warmth.
The best pedal with this axe, and no matter the amp (vox modeling 112, bandit 112, toneblaster 15x, 59ltd bassman, all clean) it delivers. Even through my dod fx7 w7phones at night.
Reliability
:
10
Way strong, but it doesn't accept every psu without humming so better stick with the classic Ibanez ac109 and everything will be fine.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
Compared with ts7, ud100, pl5, womanizer, gt2, the HH delivers what I need with this axe and the others don't.
The simplicity of the whole thing (gain at max and managing with the vol pot of the guitar) is jaw-dropping.
I am perfectly happy with the HH, what a good deal it is!
So if you own the HH this way of doing could change your opinion, like it did for me. From just ok to astounding.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: USD 45
Submitted 09/15/2008
at 11:15am
by Max
Ease of Use
:
7
Need a little bit of work to get what you want.
Sound Quality
:
6
It do distort the signal! But maybe to sharp sometimes - now, after i play in the practice room with my band along on good ampdistortions, i would say the hot head doesn't give me the sound i want to have.
Reliability
:
7
about 5 months old and still works - but the bypasspedal seems to be wanky now... would gig without a backup, if it was new.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
not dealt yet - but 3 years of guarrantie
Overall Rating
:
7
i play mostly funkrock, blues and hardrock and it fitted perfectly in my style - and for just 45$ it's a good deal. but now i'm looking for a higher quality distortion, which gives me the sound, i need today.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: EUR 47,00
Submitted 08/25/2008
at 05:11pm
by Primaxyes
Ease of Use
:
9
It has four knobs, no rocketscience there.
Sound Quality
:
3
It's bad, it doens't sound like advertised, it's just a flimsy distortion, unplayeble with an solidstate amp. I play threw a Primaxes Custom > Marshall G50R CD amp.
Reliability
:
9
I'd risk it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
6
It looks good but that's it, for metal i'd stick with the DS-1 or my NOBELS DT-SN.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/20/2008
at 04:09pm
by kennyram
Email: kennyram52<at>yahoo dot com dot
Ease of Use
:
6
The nice thing about a Digitech Hot Head is the way it can provided a distortion sound
that clearly is more than an overdrive, without the gain of a typical metal pedal. The
controls are staight forward, but it is difficult to get increased midrange punch with this
pedal. This pedal features both treble and bass controls, with no midrange control, and
the usual way to increase midrange with this setup is to simply roll back the bass and
treble, allowing more midrange to come through. This method works fine on both my
Grunge and Bad Monkey pedals, but rolling back bass and treble on a Hot Head mainly
decreases overall volume....the midrange is rolled out, too!
I would like this pedal much better if the bass and treble controls only affected the bass
and treble. Because of this tone shaping problem, the Hot Head can be tempermental,
especially if the player wants to go from a real clean sound with lots of bass and treble
to a warm "brown" sound, with lots of mids, using one stomp of the foot. Considering
this tempermental quality, I would say the name "Hot Head" fits this pedal quite well.
Sound Quality
:
7
I presently play through an all tube Marshall 2x12 combo, and generally use guitars that
have two standard type alnico humbuckers. The Hot Head produces almost no background
noise and this, coupled with hum cancelling features of the pickups, makes it easy to get
lots of hight volume distortion with little noise mixed in.
Using the mixer output on this pedal adds bite, and makes the overall sound cut through
with increased definition. I like it better than the output labled "amp", although it is a
matter of personal taste.
The Hot Head appears to be designed with classic rock in mind. Tones it creates remind
me of bands like ZZ Top, Bon Jovi, and Boston. Those playing mainly blues or metal may
like other pedals better, but for straight ahead rock, the Hot Head works extremely well,
once the E.Q. is set, which, as I said before, can be a little difficult.
Reliability
:
10
The Hot Head is a sturdy a pedal, and I doubt it will ever break down. The casing is solid
metal and it sits on solid rubber. Very, very durable.
Customer Support
:
9
I once wrote Digitech a technical question about another product I own that they make,
and they were so quick to respond to my question, that I bought more of their products,
including this one. They impress me as being both friendly and involved. I think Digitech
is a really good company.
Overall Rating
:
8
Overall, with the exception that it is difficult to adjust for enhanced midrange, the Hot Head
is a very usefull pedal, and should last the owner a long, long time. I own several pedals,
and none are beyond replacing, but the Hot Head has a personality of it's own, and, if you
like it, it won't let you down.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: Euros 30 USED
Submitted 07/29/2008
at 03:48am
by P
Ease of Use
:
9
Very easy to get a good sound of it, just remember not to max the EQ's but just adjust them very litte as they have a huge impact on sound even with the slightest turn.
Sound Quality
:
10
Very very good, I've tried them all and narrowed to this, the Boss DS-1 is good, but this is just better, more warmer and organic sounding distortion. The speaker emulated output is also very nice add to the pedal as it can be used for real! Also what I really like is that it doesn't color the sound anyway it really lets your sound come through.
Reliability
:
9
I use it without a backup, no reason to have one, it lasts as long as any other pedal
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with 'em
Overall Rating
:
10
I play rock / metal, and use this in front of my Marshall JCM 800 50w head and a 15w custom tube combo and I get very good "woody" distiortion from this little pedal. I recommend this to everyone looking for a good distortion pedal. It's cheap but the sound is not a cheap copy from any other distortion pedal, it's got flavors from others but in the end has it's own unique sound.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 04/15/2008
at 02:47am
by James Leach II
Ease of Use
:
10
Stock Brand New Digitech Hot Head Distortion. It's a simple, and efficient stompbox. It's easy as pie to use, and great sounding without a lot of tweaking.
Sound Quality
:
9
I run this bad boy with my Ibanez RG350DX, Fender Strat Custom Texas Special, and Warmoth Custom into a Hughes and Kettner Blue series combo amp. It is sometimes in junction with my synth wah, hyper phaser, volume pedal, amongst a BBE Sonic stomp. But this review is based on it and a guitar and amp. This thing gets great sounding distortion without mudding up the notes to sound like fuzzy garbage. My biggest problem with the boss Metal Zone was it's tonal loss when cranking the distortion, this pedal mimics some of the lighter, yet capable of being pretty heavy sounds that the Boss pedals do but a fraction of the cost and seemingly sturdier. I go for the full stack distortion sound and a little British rock. It's great! I eve play Nu-metal on it and it's perfect.
Reliability
:
10
I'm sure if I dropped it and it landed on some rocks and tumbled into acid it'd fail, but for everyday purposes I'm sure it's gonna take a beating. It's heavy, thick metal chasis and very cool design (boss style with some different batter compartment features). I am definately throwing this into the live gig, and would only bring spare batteries knowing that's the only problem I could face.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I used the website for digitech and found all my answers without looking to Customer Support, I even registered my product there.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I stated previously I play Nu-metal to rock and some odd stuff outside that. This pedal is great and can dial in on a number of great sounding but tonally clear distortions. You don't have to crank the OD to 11 and then palm mute everything on a Boss Metal Zone to be heavy, and this proves it. I can get all the oomph of that pedal without the questioning of what notes the band is even playing. I've been a casual player going on 11 years and a gigging player for about 5 of those years... I wish I had this then. I tried Tubescreamers, DS-1's, OD's, amp ditry chanels, Line 6 DM5, and a Zoom 505 (series 1 and 2)... the zoom was my favorite, utnil now. If it were stolen I'd be pretty pissed, but wouldn't settle for anything less, so I'd probably buy another the next day!!! I do wish it had a Mid range tone button, but a High and Low is more than some crap and even big name pedals have! It's a great tool to stay true to your notes, and rock hard at the same time! I also have to mention it's orange casing is pretty sweet. I'm not a colors kinda guy but cannot stop thinking of how cool this thing sounds and looks
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/22/2008
at 09:29pm
by Brian Mc
Ease of Use
:
8
This pedal is pretty much a Boss DS-1. But instead of having a single knob for tone, it has a high and a low control. It's fairly easy to get a good distorted sound out of it. Although it doesn't sound exactly like a DS-1, it sounds very close to one. Although like the DS-1, since it's impossible to get a creamy sounding tube distortion out of it, if you experiment with the settings on your amp, the sound, that it produces is very good. It's not as outrageous sounding as a lot of other distortion pedals on the market these days, but it is very musical. The speaker simulated output isn't all that bad, but sounds sort of sterile gooding thru a mixing console for recording. Since Hot Head is a very misleading name for this pedal, this is the reason why I didn't give it a !0.
Sound Quality
:
9
This pedal tends to work well with humbucking pickups to get that classic fat distorted sound in the bridge position. If you roll off your guitar tone with a humbucking neck pickup, it's fairly easy to get a good woman tone out of it, which will remind you of what the solos sounded like on the old Guns & Roses albums. As far as getting a good Black Sabbath or a Bad Company guitar sound out of it, although it falls short at nailing those sounds exactly, it doesn't take much experimentation to get a sound, that you'll be really pleased with. The sound of the Hot Head isn't as raspy as a Pro Co Ratt. However, for classic rock, you'll be able to find a heck of a lot more uses for it than an Electro Harmonix Big Muff.
Reliability
:
10
I've had mine for two years and haven't had any problems with it, but it seems to drain a 9 volt battery faster than other pedals do. So, I bought a power supply for it. It's about as noisy as any distortion pedal is, but it isn't as bad as some are.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
If you're trying to sound like Van Halen, playing blues, or industrial, a Hot Head won't do the job for you. For an overall distorted classic rock sound, it will do a good job. I actually prefer it over a stock Boss DS-1, which retails for about the same price. If my Hot Head got lost or stolen, I wouldn't think twice about buying another one. Although the Hot Head doesn't sound close to the distortion, that you can get out of the dirty channel of a really good tube amp, compared to a lot of other more expensive pedals, to get something, that sounds as good or better in a pedal, you're going to be forced into spending a heck of a lot more money.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/12/2007
at 05:55pm
by mike
Ease of Use
:
8
Took a while to explore the settings that worked with my setup, probably because its a vesatile pedal and the high and low tone pots are VERY responsive, a small movement will have a big effect on the sound...so it can be a bit fiddly.
Sound Quality
:
10
Initially thought it was a one trick pedal, i.e. for hot overdriven sounds, however i found that when you roll down the gain it gives a lovely very glassy sound that still has a bluesy crunch to it, it gives me a sound i've been looking for for a LONG time.
I've always hated the way my amp and guitar interacted before (marshal 100w halfstack and les paul copy), i felt the sound was too muddy; but this pedal makes me feel like im almost playing a new instrument, verrry happy with this pedal. Live i chain it up with a big muff and kick on the big muff to get heavyer, it also works wonders with the big muff by making it sound clearer and less compressed/muddy.
Reliability
:
10
Probably tank proof.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
9
This is a great pedal, the only thing you have to watch is that when the gain gets set too high it can be a bit o.t.t and harsh, personally i use it with the gain fairly low and kick on a big muff for when i want a really dirty sound. I baisically think this pedal is a great tone enhancer/conditioner and just adds loads of tubelike harmonics, im not keen on the higher gain settings though, thats why i hook it up with my big muff to get those sounds....so if your looking for more heavyer distortion in one pedal go for the digitech grunge instead.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: USD 40
Submitted 05/25/2007
at 01:13pm
by Roger White
Ease of Use
:
6
While I admit it can be tricky balancing the treble and bass controls as pointed out by numerous previous reviewers, with a little effort and a bit of patience this pedal can produce some of the best distortion you can get from a pedal.
Sound Quality
:
9
I love this pedal. I've been playing for 30 years and never found a distortion pedal I wanted to own until I tried this one. It gets me into early Jimmy Page or Jeff Beck territory with a tele through a clean Fender amp.
Reliability
:
10
Built like a brick outhouse.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No contact, no problems.
Overall Rating
:
10
Great pedal for the money. After reading the previous reviews, I notice that some folks consider this more of an overdrive than a distortion. In my frame of reference (classic rock), it almost has too much gain on tap. Man, how nasty do some of you want your sound to be? I never turn the gain up past 50%, but it's deliciously gravelly with gain at 0. Like others have said, this is basically a hot-rodded Boss DS-1 for a fraction of the cost of the usual big-name suspects. I just had to chime in to offset some of the kiddie reviews that might prevent a serious user from checking one out.
UPDATE:
This is August 2008 update to this review. I've had the Hot Head pedal for a couple of years now, and it still amazes me what a great value it is. I love the sound of this pedal through a *clean* amp. I've played it through 6L6, 6V6, and EL-84-based amps and it has shined on all of them, as long as the amp has a decent clean sound and sufficient headroom. I recently acquired a clone of a 5E3 Fender Deluxe, which has gorgeous tones but relatively non-existent clean headroom. The Hot Head sounds absolutely awful into this amp, which is no surprise since this amp's circuitry needs no outside help to produce harmonic richness. But it made me realize that many of the earlier, negative reviews for this pedal might have stemmed from folks using the pedal into an already overdriven amp. The optimum place for this pedal is definitely in front of an amp with a pristine clean tone. IMHO, of course.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: USD 20.00
Submitted 03/12/2007
at 08:21pm
by Joseph Hadad
Ease of Use
:
7
It has four knobs, all clearly labeled (level, low, high, gain). It would shock me, if someone couldn't figure them out! There is one input (for the instrument) and two outputs (one that goes to the amp, and one that goes into a mixing board, for direct recording, etc). When you press the pedal, a red LED lights up and the effect is engaged. Why did I only give it a 7? Read on...
So, how easy is it to get a good sound? Honestly, for me, it has not been easy at all! One disappointing aspect is that even when the gain knob is turned all the way down, it still distorts slightly (it would have been nice to use as a clean boost pedal), but I suppose that is expected for a distortion pedal (it's definitely NOT an overdrive pedal).
Also, the high and low controls are VERY touchy, which can be a good thing with some pedals, but not with this one. I will explain in the next section...
Sound Quality
:
4
I am going to be up front about this: I purchased this pedal from Ebay (in brand new condition), without first getting to try it out with my rig...baaaad move!
This is the basic rig I hooked this thing up through: Ibanez RG570 (with Dimarzio Breed in bridge)>Hot Head>Peavey Classic 30. Decent setup, right? NOT WITH THIS PEDAL!
So, what prompted me to buy the "Hot Head"? Honestly, I wanted an alternative to the gain that is built into my amp. I was hoping to coax some heavier tones than what I already had. I should point out that I normally boost the amp with a Bad Monkey Overdrive, which sounds fantastic, but I guess I just wanted a new sound to play around with.
Why doesn't it sound good, you ask? Remember when I mentioned the touchy Low and High controls? I cannot, for the life of me, get a good, full, clear sound out of this pedal. It sounds thin and buzzy, and gets worse as you increase the level of gain. You would think that you could just boost the low end, right? NO. The second you do that, it just sounds boomy and weird. Also, for the love of God, do NOT turn the High control past noon, unless you like the sound that bees make.
Having said that, I believe that nearly every pedal has a purpose. In my opinion, it is a noise pedal. It's great for producing ear-splitting feedback, or some interesting fuzz tones, but that's about it. Don't expect to do any kind of real heavy rock tones or metal stuff. Palm muting sounds muddy and farty, and getting fat solo sounds seems next to impossible.
Remember the Boss Heavy Metal, or DOD Grunge? I reminds me of those, sort of. It doesn't have as much distortion (but still more than enough), and sounds just as lifeless.
I might keep it just to use with my synthesizer, just for wierd industrial sounds, etc, but I haven't tried it out yet for that purpose.
Reliability
:
10
This is not my first Digitech. I have a Digidelay and a Bad Monkey. They have both been very reliable. The style totally reminds me of Boss stuff. The casing seems super heavy duty- you could definitely hurt someone with these things! I expect it to last a long, long time.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never tried to get customer support. I haven't needed it. If it broke, I would buy something else. I really don't care if it stops working.
Overall Rating
:
4
I play mostly hard rock, and metal. This things is not a good match, and I honestly don't know what kind of music it would be a good match for. I have been playing for more than 15 years, and have a pretty good idea of the types of sounds I am looking for. I didn't expect the Hot Head to sound great, but I didn't expect it to sound this bad either. I have learned that, with exception for my Bad Monkey, you usually get what you pay for, so I am not entirely disappointed. As I said, I was just looking for an alternative to my normal setup, something cheap. I succeeded in that respect, at least. Oh well....
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 02/25/2007
at 06:45am
by norrenebel slim
Email: poucemoussu at freesurf<dot>ch
Ease of Use
:
10
Best feature is the mixer output, gives your tone better punch and definition. I am using an AB box(coolswitch from Art, with leds, for cheap) so I switch between mixer and amp modes to solo or rhythm.
Eq works well, dist level too but keep in mind this box is not an aggressive one so it won't do your chunk chunk metallica background.
Noise floor very low, battery access perfect and doesn't eat too much of those.
Sound Quality
:
10
As I said, not your aggressive dist box. But for smooth solos, melodic stuff it is very very good. With a telecaster too, and I think the more gain the pedal has over an overdrive is to compensate for lower output pickups, still in the overdrive range of sounds.
The mixer output works with other dist boxes too, always active.
The hot head is a clear, smooth sounding unit, more an overdrive in fact. For my needs it is perfect, does the malmsteen melodic lines very well, and bluesy rhythmic stuff has just the right amount of loosiness required.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
None of my dod/digitech stuff ever broke.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I like the look, too!
Using this box with Ibanez7strings, noiseless strat, p90 flat top les paul, the controls lets me adjust the pedal perfectly.
Again: don't buy this for aggressive chunk chunk or fuzz nastiness if that's what you're after! They do the grunge pedal for this, still with mixer option, what a great idea they had on this one feature!
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: AUS$ 50
Submitted 11/06/2006
at 04:55pm
by Buzz
Ease of Use
:
10
Few knobs, too easy.
Sound Quality
:
5
Setup1: Epi SG=> HotHead=> Vox Pathfinder15R. Tone Quality: 4/5
Setup2: Epi SG=> HotHead=> JTM45 Plexi . Tone Quality: 6/5
Distortion not as good as DS1, however sound more dynamic and much better lows then DS1. Gain knob produces minor variation of tone and becomes muddy after 2 o'clock. Level control generates mild overdrive on max setting which is appreciated by amp tubes. Sound pretty dry and abrasive on solid state amp.
Good thing is that it has two outputs - Line and Amp. Line output has cabinet simulator build in.
It doesn???t sound even close to sample from DigiTech web site (false advertising).
Not noisy at all.
Reliability
:
10
Build to withstand nuclear blast.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never call them
Overall Rating
:
5
Playing mostly rock and HM, I was looking for DS1 substitute with more tone range and more bass. Alright, I've got more bass but nothing more. It's not as smooth as DS1. Grab soldering iron and replace few resistors and caps in DS1 and it will yield rewards. Alternatively, buy Grunge pedal. It covers more bases.
If lost or stolen, I would be sorry for the battery within.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/11/2006
at 05:34pm
by Steven
Email: ste_2402 at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
Four Controls, Level Gain and 2 band eq. very easy to dial in your desired sounds, if not then theres an idiots guide to different settings to try included in the booklet.
Sound Quality
:
9
I play Washburn N4ESA (a humbuckers guitar) into my beloved Marshall AVT50 combo with a Zakk Wylde Overdrive and some other effects boxes. I use both the effects loop and have a rig in front of the amp. This box goes in front as I believe all distortion & gain pedals should be plugged into the jack input.
Great Distortion pedal- standard. I can easily sound like my favourite artists- well thats what happens when youre a Bettencourt, Marty friedman/ Vai wannabe like me..
Ive compared this pedal with a KEELEY DS-1 Ultra which I tried before this. A great sounding pedal, but lacking in the gain. The Hot Head has PLENTY of gain and the distortion responded great to my rhythm playing in the shop which is why I told them 'I'll take one!'
Plenty of dynamics, not too muddy and much gain which is exactly what I needed. The pedal itself sounds much like some boutique modded distortion boxes Ive tried- smoothe distortion and warm sustain so Im thinking that theres 'better than stock quality' components inside.
Reliability
:
10
The pedal is built like a tank and seems bombproof. no doubts. and I use PSU's with my pedald- no batteries!
One word of advice- always use a BOSS adaptor or equivelant- its not worth risking your pedals by getting a cheap transformer.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No dealings with these people
Overall Rating
:
10
I love to play heavy metal and shredder type rock. Nuno Bettencourt and Van Halen type riffs which are very percussive and rhythmic.
If I solo I wanna play as fast as I can.
I have been playing guitar seriously for about 10+ years and I'll outplay anyone lol- joke ok sshhhh!
I love the way this pedal responds to my rhythm playing in particular becaus I use alot of muting etc for funky/heavy groove vibes. The pedal responds well dynamically. I love that theres lots of gain which is where the DS-1 fell short. the distortion is warm and smoothe and the tone its quite unique. this pedal has alot of it's own character which is cool.
My guitar riffs and playing sounds very musical through this pedal. If I play it long enough I may even like it more than my Marshall's dirt! but that will take some doing!
One thing Id like to share is Ive been playing for years without pedals and only believed in playing distortion from a great amp. This pedal is a great alternative to using an amps overdrive channel. I'll recommend this pedal to anyone for exceptionally great rock sounds.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: 1600 (SKK)
Submitted 06/23/2006
at 09:33am
by Dot.
Ease of Use
:
10
There are 4 knobs to play with, 2 of them for distortion and volume levels, 2 for simple EQ (low and high frequencies to adjust). Very simple even for anyone who ever heard there are some pedals for guitar. Inside the simple manual sheet you'll find description of its parts and important notes about battery replacement procedure and use of the AC adapter. Manual was printed in China.
Sound Quality
:
9
I went to huge music shop to get THE distortion for me. I bought new amp which has an extraordinary good clean channel, but for the built-in drive I needed some "reinforcement". I though of many legendary pedals like Mig Muff, Rat, some of the yellow Boss pedals, sexy silver Marshalls just anything that woul fit my requests... which were a priori versatility and sound quality. I wasn't limited with money as all the non-tube drive pedals cost almost the same. I write whole this story because I didn't really know Digitech makes some other pedals than multieffects and as I tried all the pedals above (which were all good but either one-purpose non versatile things (Big Muff, Proco Rat) or simply did not fit to my ears (Marshalls, Ibanez)). I tried the funny orange Hot Head and wow that was my pedal. The GAIN knob does its job from first touch (slight drive from 8:00) and does not work in jumps like some other pedals do. The simple EQ lets you to get wide range of sounds and I failed to find more versatile pedal in this price category. My target was to get slight to middle range distortion as I don't need any metal sounds. I have other pedal to play with more drive. It is very similar to Boss DS-1 for my ears but I personaly chose Hot Head because I still heard the character of my guitar when played. The DS-1 is great, too but in direct comparsion it took too much of the sound for itself. The sound may not fit everyone's needs, there is a bit of this "chemistry" in it but be sure to give it a chance. I was searching for exactly that kind of distortion and as I found it, this is a review of satisfied buyer. I play an '72 Mexico tele through Fender Amp, the pedal has no true bypass but doesn't mess your signal and it's very quiet unless on full gain of course. With the two EQ pots you can get rich variety of sounds from deep and dark muddy distortion to to high tone ear torture. Possible great settings for both solos and backlite riffs. I chose 9/10 because the EQ knobs don't respond as dynamically as I would like to have them and I partially miss the MIDDLE knob. But for the price it's still more than enough.
Reliability
:
10
The pedal is well built. Heavy. Looks very reliable and I'm sure it hurts when thrown. I will definitely use it without backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I play many styles /blues, classic rock, grunge (Alice in Chains, Pearl Jam), indie music (Radiohead, Muse, Mars Volta.../, this pedal is very versatile /allthough I don't use it to play all the mentioned styles/, it does what I need and it does it very well. With the price paid, sound possibilities, metal design and with the fact I tried many similar pedals I have no problem do rate it as fantastic value. If stolen I would buy another one.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $40
Submitted 05/24/2006
at 01:03pm
by your mother
Ease of Use
:
10
gain,low,high, level. Very easy to get a large variety of distortion tones.
Sound Quality
:
10
I compared it back and forth with a my ds-1 on a strat into a soul-o-45. I love the basic character of the boss ds-1 distortion but it is either to thin or two muddy and won't let the guitar through. With everything set around 12 It was possible to make the hothead sound almost identical to a ds-1. It has the same distortion flavor but with more harmonic content and more of you guitars tone comming through. It was impossible to make the ds-1 sound as good as the hothead.
Crank up the gain and bass with a trebble setting 12-1 o'clock And you will get a very modern and big marshall style overdrive sounds great for heavy riffs and much more amp like than a ds-1. It is impossible to get this sound from a ds-1 even my analogman modded one didn't sound nearly as good.
To me this is the best pedal for the ds-1 type of distortion sound.
Reliability
:
10
It weights like 3 pounds. If you ever need to knock someone out this would be a good substitute for a brick.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
It's the best sounding distortion pedal i've picked up for less tha $100.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $40
Submitted 04/24/2006
at 08:23pm
by Kevan
Ease of Use
:
10
It's a stompbox. Guitar in on the right side, amp out on the left. Four tone controls...not too difficult, huh? I bought it from Guitar Center a couple of years ago, and I think that there was a warranty card and manual, but I just sent out the warranty card and lost the manual. I don't know of any kind of upgrades, but I'm sure some gearhead out there who's a lot smarter than me has done it.
Sound Quality
:
10
I used an old Lotus Les Paul copy with ancient humbuckers through a Fender Sidekick Reverb 25 when I bought this. The guitar is okay but has its share of problems like noisy pickups, and amp is a Fender and had unbeatable cleans, but the distortion was lacking, to say the least. This was a cheap fix for the sound I wanted, and it sounds great! Slightly dirty to balls-to-the-wall metal with a turn of a knob! I chose this over other pedals becuase I thought that it had a little more refined distortion than a Boss, but that's just my opinion. It's never noisy, but does cut out and degrade in sound quality as the batteries die. As we all know, don't leave your effects plugged in if you're using batteries! I did that once and it drained the batter over the course of a few days. On the plus side, I think I averaged about one battery a month, but an adapter might be a good investment. Great sound for forty dollars through a solid state amp!
Reliability
:
10
This little guy is incredibly reliable. Metal casing and rubber bottom and footswitch. The footswitch is secure, but removes easily to change the battery (all you need is a pen or stick). I would use it on a gig without a backup, but more on this later in my review...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never tried, never needed. I think that they had either a three or five year warranty when I bought it, so don't get suckered into buying another warranty at the store! You'll get one with the pedal!
Overall Rating
:
10
I've been playing electric guitar for about two and a half years and play 40% rock/metal, 45% acoustic, and 15% rap fills and latin. When I was using the Fender amp that I described above, this gave me a great rock sound to complement the already great clean sound that I had in the amp alone. Together they sounded great, and I would use them live if I had to...However, I recently bought a MESA/Boogie Nomad 100 Head and 4x12 Rectifier Standard Cabinet. Amazing amp, and I get any kind of distortion out of the amp now (you can do that with 9 or 10 tubes!). This pedal was great when I needed it, but now it just sits on my shelf or joins me when I play bass. No disrespect to the little guy, he was great for what I needed at the time, but what I am saying is that a good tube amp will most likely give you better distortion tone than any stompbox or effects processor. I would be a little pissed if it was stolen, but I don't really have much of a need for it anymore. I would definitly reccommend this for someone that wants a great distortion tone at a cheap price, but just keep in mind that as you move up in gear, distortion pedals become somewhat less important. By itself I give it a 10, but compared to a tube amp distortion it gets between a 7 and an 8.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $49.00
Submitted 04/17/2006
at 11:38pm
by bob
Ease of Use
:
10
Like as said before. It's a stompbox. So, not complicated. Easy to set up.
To be honest I didn't even read the manual yet.
Sound Quality
:
9
I have a Peavey Ultra all tube 3 channel amp. I love almost every thing about it except the upper mids aren't crunchy enough and the bottom is kind of muddy. I went to Guitar Center actually looking for a Marshall Guv'nor pedal to run at a low gain setting to add some Marshall color to my sound.
They don't carry them. So, after trying out most every pedal they had I tried the Hot head pedal and I knew in a second it's what I wanted. I run the level at about 2 and the gain at about the same just for some color. I love it! My amp sounds like a marshall stack!
Even on my clean channel I get that Marshall twang.
Reliability
:
9
It's built a lot heavier than I thought it would be. I've never had any Digitech before and the heftiness was a surprise.
I'd use it without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I haven't dealt with the company, so I don't know.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play a variety from contemporary christian to eighties type metal. I said "type" metal cause at home I just play my own stuff, but I love the eighties sound. The Hot Head is a good match for that.
I've played for 29 years and have tried a lot of pedals and this is a really good one.
I would replace it if lost or stolen.
My favorite feature is that it doesn't overpower my tone - It just shapes it.
I compared it to Boss's DS-1 and mega distortion and some others but this one did what I wanted it to do.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $40
Submitted 03/08/2006
at 12:06pm
by Carl Betten
Ease of Use
:
10
I've had this pedal for over a year now and am really liking it. Very easy to use and tweak and get a good sound. Manual is brief but explains how to use it.
Sound Quality
:
10
I agree with the below review about the touch dymanics. From light to heavy attack the pedal responds very well. Lightly picked its very smooth almost like a light overdrive but when under heavy attack the distortion really comes out. It also responds very well to adjusting the volume on the guitar. Overall a very good sound.
Reliability
:
10
Construction seems very good.
Customer Support
:
9
I have called and emailed Digitech and they respond very fast.
Overall Rating
:
10
I use this pedal all of the time and love it's sound. Easily adjustable and very responsive. I would replace it if lost or stolen.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $40
Submitted 03/07/2006
at 08:01pm
by William Hunter
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to use. The Low and High controls allow you to really equalize the pedal. Level and gain controls speak for themselves and are quite responsive. There is also an second out for cab emulation that can go to your mixer and it works!
Sound Quality
:
10
I've been playing for over thirty-five years and have tried out or owned just about every pedal known to man. LOL You have to tweak this pedal just like any other to get your sound. I have tried it with my single coil and humbucker axes and with different amps both SS and tube. I have gotten some fantastic sounds from this pedal! It's touch dymanics are excellent. Again you have to set it up. I'll bet some of the negitive reviews below are from people who didn't take the time to set it up correctly.
Reliability
:
10
Built like a Mac Truck! Heavy and sturdy. No problem here.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Have never called them so I can't comment.
Overall Rating
:
10
Excellent pedal. For heavy overdrive to mid distortion, I don't think it can be beat. Great touch dynamics and easily tweaked.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $40
Submitted 03/03/2006
at 10:23pm
by Robert
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to use. It's a stompbox, so it's pretty straight forward
Sound Quality
:
7
I'm using a Line 6 Spider II, set on the Clean Red, behringer compression, Crybaby, and a fat strat. It gets a smooth sound, but be careful of the HIGH, it can get brittle sounding fast. However, I use it for a rock/blues type of sound and it fits perfectly. I really like this sound. When mixing it with amp distortion, be careful, it can get uncontrollable, but it sounds great ran through a clean setting. Lot's of negative reviews from people and they really voiced themselves offensively, it's really sad. I say, try it out. It's great from rock/blues. Not for metal, but they have pedals that do that also (the Metal Master is my fave for that)Tone is subjective. This works well for me, who know about your ear. Just keep an open mind, and an open ear.
Reliability
:
10
yes, it is dependable. Built like a tank
Yes, I would use it without backup
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
Great pedal for some rock and blues. Get's a great tone without coloring your regular sound. The only thing that I don't like is that the HIGH eq is VERY touchy and get's brittle easily. Nothing some EQ won;t fix though.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/29/2005
at 06:05am
by Anonymous
Email: mrcrowley at freemail<dot>hu
Ease of Use
:
7
Quite obvious, a Level knob for volume, Low, High for equalizing and Gain for the distortion amount. It rather depends on the setting of your amp, although I wish it'd have an EQ part like the Metal Zone has. It has 2 output jacks, one to the amp and one to the mixer, but I found the mixer output quite crappy, realy chunky, and the characteristic of the guitar is lost when I use that. I rather record with the amp output too...
The pedal part is quite easy to get off, you just need to push the side with a plug or something like that, and you can change the battery.
The manual is really made for ones who don't know much about how a pedal works :-)
Sound Quality
:
8
I use that with a German neck-through axe, armed with a Gibson Iommi pickup at the bridge, and with a Dynacord solid-state combo. It really sounds like an overdriven valve head. Great tubey sound lies within, BUT its versatility is not for the range of tones but for the tone itself. This pedal can be used in any kind of music where a tubey distortion sound is needed. However the knobs can be used for some corrections, you cannot really change the tone. I need to tweak my amp around to change a bit, but basically the tone stays the same.
It's real verstaility reveals only if you have a wider range of EQ on your amp, or use an EQ pedal with that. It really sounds nice without EQing, but when I started to experiment with the EQ pedal along with the HotHead, I found how brutal or even really soft sounds are coming, and the HotHead still didn't lose it's characteristic.
On its own it's really great for hard rock tones, or bluesy sounds, but with an EQ pedal you really can get any sound you like without losing that nice tubey sound.
Reliability
:
10
A bit larger than he Boss pedals, and more thicker...Even an elephant could step on it, however it eats the battery faster than the Boss pedals.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Just bought that
Overall Rating
:
8
As I said this pedal is good for every music that needs a tubey distortion sound. I like it better than the Boss DS-1, cause this baby not only has a great and individual tone, but keeps the tone of the guitar too, even if you use an EQ along with it. I think until I won't have a valve am/combo I'll keep that.
I only wish it'd have the same EQ knob system that the Metal Zone had, then it would be really a versatile pedal.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $40
Submitted 10/21/2005
at 11:07am
by Tom S.
Ease of Use
:
9
Very easy to use. I like the two tone knobs for Low and High Boost/Cut. Much more dynamic than a single tone knob.
Sound Quality
:
9
MIM Fat Strat --> Hot Head --> MXR Smart Gate --> Vox AD15VT Valvetronix.
I wanted to get some more edge and bite to my setup and was undecided whether to get a distortion or overdrive. With my amp I have a gain and master volume, so I cranked it up and decided I wanted more. I went to my local retailer and tried OD and DIST and liked the distortion.
This unit has a good all-around rock sound. The grunge and metal pedals were too harsh and could not be dialed in for subtle or light dirt settings. This was. I may get an overdrive or metal pedal later, but this is a good start.
Reliability
:
10
Built tough - heavy as a brick.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
NA
Overall Rating
:
9
Good all-around pedal for light to medium distortion. Can approximate an OD pedal cranked but if you need more distortion you may need a heavier pedal.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: 26 (British #) used
Submitted 10/15/2005
at 01:56pm
by The Fuzz! The Fuzz!!!!
Ease of Use
:
10
Four knobs: Level for loudness, low for bass, high for treble, gain for distortion. Couldn't be easier. No need for a manual, though the one provided does the job.
Sound Quality
:
3
I stick to my Epiphone SG religiously (despite what my friends say about it!), but I've tred it through a few guitars/amps and never had any real success. No matter what I play through the sound is just so fuzzy with little clarity. Best results through celestion-speaker amps, but even then I wasn't overly impressed.
Reliability
:
8
It's well built, solid and heavy. Doesn't inspire as much confidence as Boss, but sturdy none the less.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never used it.
Overall Rating
:
5
My band plays a mixture of heavy rock to pop punk, with influences like Anthrax, Therapy?, Bruce Dickinson, Smashing Pumpkins and Wildhearts. For me the Hot Head just gives out too much fuzz. Open chords are muddy, palm-muting is weak. I bought the pedal on the strength of the samples on Digitech's web site, thinking it sounded like a good rock n' roll guitar pedal. I won't buy anything based on internet samples again! Overall the Hot Head is okay if you use it along with other pedals (like a delay maybe) but in the end you get what you pay for. This was cheap!
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $65
Submitted 09/07/2005
at 04:01am
by Larry
Ease of Use
:
7
I use a Gibson LP with a Marshall 1986 50 watt head and a 4x12
Marshall-cab loaded with 30 w. Celestion tan-backs. I bought
the digitech Hot Head after hearing a few samples on digitechs
website and i was looking for a quick and cheap way to get that
classic full bore stack sound without upsetting my neighbours.
The pedal is very easy to use and you don't need to look at the
manual.
Sound Quality
:
8
The Hot Head distortion works best at lower drive settings despite
what the manual tells you. The EQ takes a while to master, but if
you are a bass-junkie like me, you will get a very punchy bass-response
if leaving the Hi at 12 o'clock and the Low set at about two-three.
This pedal can simulate a plexi at full bore, but you really need to
set the drive low, otherwise the pedal gets way too fizzy.
The thing is not noisy at all. The secret is to use a fairly clean
tube amp and work with the EQ. Forget using a cheap guitar with
crappy pickups into a no-name transistor-amp. This thing works best
with humbuckers and a good clean tube-amp.
Reliability
:
6
The Hot head is really sturdy and also a bit heavier than Boss-
pedals. It seems well built but i don't expect it to hold together
more than 3-5 years. You get what you pay for so don't expect hard
road use...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with Digitech - don't know...
Overall Rating
:
7
I play all styles of metal (classic hardrock to "stoner" to death)
and i'm quite picky. This is a good and cheap pedal if you are willing to spend an hour setting it up and testing for it's sweet-spot. Don't buy it if you hate the sound of the Boss Distortion-1, Marshall Goveneur or the MXR Distortion +
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: 139 ($NZ)
Submitted 06/16/2005
at 03:56am
by Hemi Jones (I have no shame in using my REAL name. I dont need to hide behind a handle)
Ease of Use
:
10
Really good. Simple controls. Gives great sound with a slight tweak straight out of the box.
Sound Quality
:
9
Im using this with a Roland Jazz Chorus 55 and a Behringer SL2442FX-PRO mixing desk and some db Technologies Opera 112 speakers. Using the cabinet emulator out from the pedal into the desk sounds really good and I get great foldback through my amp. There is no noise that i can hear... I only got some noise when I used a crap cable. So I suggest to all you others that think there is noise - USE BETTER CABLES.
Reliability
:
10
This is a very dependable pedal and I would definitly take it on the road with me. The only problem I have is it keeps cutting out but thats because I keep kicking the power cable (a cheap one). No problems with the pedal itself.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Havent needed to get it repaired so havent dealt with the company. The shop I got it from was useless though.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play basic raw rock and this pedal is perfect for my sound. I would get this pedal again. Its the best my rig has ever sounded. Now, a stab at the other forum members (on other forums as well) - DO NOT say anything is shit. You'll be better to say 'This is not suitable for my needs' or something similar. Just because you don't like something doesn't mean its shit. Get that through your thick heads. And please, LEARN TO SPELL!!! I apologise to those I may have offended, but I have been offended. Things may not be good for your sound, but it will most likely be good for somebody else. For example: A Digitech Metal Master Pedal would be no good for the likes of Eric Clapton. You get it now? Good. The Digitech Hot Head Distortion Pedal is good FOR ME. I reccommend it to anybody who plays straight rock.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: 60 (Canadian)
Submitted 06/15/2005
at 09:47am
by iamthewookie
Email: iamwookie<at>techie dot com
Ease of Use
:
4
Sound changes....i swear...set the gain next day sounds off...go figure.
Dirty distortion, I like punk. Just traded in my Hothead for the Digitech Grunge....now that's a sweet pedal.
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
Hum...ho. hum....nothing but Hum....other pedals...BOS..VOX and Grunge nada.
this pedal sucks.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
nope
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
over all...this pedal can sound ok if using a digital delay and bring down the gain.
for general overall use just can't cut it.
i play in worship bands that play from drop kick murphy punk to 80' hair bands to green day.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: $65 (CAN)
Submitted 05/15/2005
at 01:43pm
by Mike
Ease of Use
:
7
The pedal sounds pretty good when u find a good setting for your style. the thing i didnt like is i dont think there is enouigh distortion because i play alot of thrash and speed and some rock. its still a good pedal, id recommend it to someone who plays all kinds of rock and some metal
Sound Quality
:
9
i use the pedal with my ibanez guitar and marshall amp. i get a pretty sweet sound out of it. it sounds reall good especially on a tube amp. i used it on my old peavy tube amp and it sounded great. i hooked up another amp tto it through the mixer output and it was pretty sweet.
Reliability
:
10
i think its a good pedal and its very reliable, its built well and its easy to change batteries on it.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with comepany
Overall Rating
:
9
I think it would be better with more distortion but for now it should be good. if i got stolen i might buy the same one or maybe the death metal
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: 38? (Euros)
Submitted 05/03/2005
at 03:56pm
by Pave
Ease of Use
:
7
Four knobs (gain, high, low and level), very simple layout. To get a good sound requires some patience and good nerves. For me it took few sessions to get it sound the way I wanted. You have to listen and learn. The manual explains all connections and controls, nothing else.
Sound Quality
:
8
I've been using it with various guitars, actives and passives. A good clean sounding amp is a must, there is no big difference is it tube or tranny. My experience is
that medium output hums sound best. Very high output pups make it sound harsh, but by turning gain down corrects the problem. Another thing is relation of tone knobs and level. It is very easy to make it sound bad by turning tones and level too high. The output clips easily.
Now I know this pedal pretty well, so I get almost everything I want from blues to 80's heavy metal. For beyond that I need something else.
Haven't tried the mixer output yet.
Reliability
:
10
It's built like a tank.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with the company.
Overall Rating
:
8
I play from blues to chainsaw rock and roll, but I use this from blues to 80's heavy metal. For heavier stuff I'll use something else. I've been playing over 20 years. I own few other Digitech products, Ibanez pedals,MXRs and some homebrews.
If it were stolen or lost, I might buy it again or buy something else like Screaming Blues.
When it's tweaked right, it acts pretty close to tube distortion - I love it. Too easy to get bad sounds - I hate that. It's pretty sensitive to my picking, softer/harder and everything between. I have never had a plain distortion before this one. I wish it had more headroom at the output.
It is really nice for some playing styles.
I tried a 12V power supply and got more output before clipping and got more scale for gain.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $38.99
Submitted 04/17/2005
at 06:38pm
by Looking out for you
Ease of Use
:
6
Simple to use, but not easy to get any good sounds out of. Also, why just put a control for your highs and lows, where's the control for your mids?! Like I just said, not hard to use, but you really are going to have a hard time finding any useable sounds.
Sound Quality
:
1
You can sit with this pedal for as long as you want, and I doubt you will find a good, useable sound. And if you can get it to sound good or want it to sound good, your going to have to buy an EQ pedal, fiddle around with the knobs on the pedal, then the EQ, and then possible your amp. Just like the other reviewer said, I can't believe I bought this pedal, I also can say I haven't come across anything as bad as it, and I hope I never do! I bought my Hot Head back in October, but didn't keep it either (wish I would have checked out a few reviews on it first--HINT) sounded so bad, even after tweaking and tweaking and tweaking, I gave up on it. IF A PEDAL TAKES LONGER THAN 5 MINUTES (shouldn't even take THAT long!) TO FIND A USEABLE SOUND, RETURN IT - IT IS A WASTE OF YOUR MONEY and would be a waste of you time to sit and attempt to get it to sound good. I sat with the pedal for around 45 minutes, I knew it was crap once it was taking so long, but had to make sure. I've never used or tried a pedal that took me a while to get a good sound.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Very solid pedal. A little heavier than Boss pedals. Sound wise, it's not reliable AT ALL! Not going to rate this since I wouldn't know which way to go, reliable in sound, or the pedal itself.
Reliable in sound = 1
Reliable in construction = 7 (to open it up to put in a battery or take out the one it comes with is stupid, it's a small pin that you have to push in)
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
1
This pedal isn't even worth anyone wasting their time trying out to see if they'd like it, don't believe me? Look at the few reviews this pedal has! Notice the low number of reviews, just about all negative also. Someone probably mentioned this already: Looks somewhat similar to a Boss DS-1, but don't be fooled, it can't even compare to a DS-1. If a pedal gets a 1 for sound quality and overall rating, that's pretty damn sad!
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $29.99
Submitted 03/19/2005
at 04:56pm
by Laurence
Ease of Use
:
8
It's easy, but takes a bit of tweaking to get the top and bottom together.
Sound Quality
:
8
A good pedal, especially for the money, but a solidly good pedal none-the-less. I think it works best as a 'dirty' booster; gain below noon and setting the volume to taste. I tried the Bad Monkey, but I've got that sound covered with a variety of pedals already. I was able to dial in the Hot Head to sound virtually the same as the Screamin' Blues, not quite as open as the SB, but extremely close. I'm playing single coils and humbuckers through a wide range of old tube gear, and the Hot Head sounds very nice as a dirty booster.
Many reviewers have written the high end is excessive and harsh. I can understand where they're coming from, but very limited adjustments to the tone controls make a big difference - sit with it some more and tweak them very lightly. I was able to get the pedal to mimic my straight amp sound, just a little louder and hairer. I once owned a Boss Blues Driver, and I can say that the Hot Head has a much less harsh high end than the Boss.
It cleans up very well rolling back the volume on the guitar, something I always like and looks for.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I have no idea, we'll wait and see.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
It's probably great, but I have no experience with them.
Overall Rating
:
8
A nice in-between overdriven sound for rock or blues, cleans up at the guitar volume knob.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $42!?!
Submitted 03/04/2005
at 05:45pm
by Your Welcome
Ease of Use
:
4
The knobs are responsive, very hard to get the pedal to sound good at all. I bought mine a few months back, but didn't review it, my situation is very similar to last few reviews. The pedal is easy to use, but not easy to get a good sound out of even if you work with it for a while. Simply put, the pedal is a waste of a measly $40, it's total crap (put short and simple). I'm rating this just like what this asks: how easy is it to get a good sound out of it? You can try and try, but most likely, it ain't gonna happen, and if it doesI guarrantee your mids on your amp are at 0 or just about with your highs and lows boosted... yeah... you really know tone.
Sound Quality
:
1
I bought mine without testing it out in the store, I thought it would be something, or somewhere near a Boss DS-1 also. Boy was I wrong, way off! I picked up the box to check the company and picked up my receipt... I thought they gave me the wrong pedal, I thought they gave me some crappy $20, even less, cheap distortion pedal. I was so shocked, I've never had or used a pedal that sounded so bad. I sat and tried working with it for about a half an hour, changing the EQ on my amps (I didn't just use this with a stack or combo) and fiddling around with the EQ on the pedal, nothing was working, nothing would sound anywhere near good? I realized then, this pedal is totally useless, I couldn't use it, I'd sound like one of the many kids today with their cheap assed Ibanez and BC Rich guitars and/or cheap Marshall MG100fx (or whatever that amp is) or cheap, low wattage combo amp. If you are one of those kids, go right ahead and buy this pedal, enjoy, it's perfect for tone deaf people or people who just buy cheap equipment. (many kids just buy Ibanez, BC Rich, and Jackson for 2 reasons :cheap and look "cool" to them) It wasn't noisy at all, no excess hissing or anything, but the pedal just sounded like a joke no matter how hard I tried to get it to sound good. So, I packed it back up about a half hour later and returned to the store with my receipt to give that piece of crap back and get my money back. I told the guys at the store that work there that I know not to sell Digitech's compact pedals, they just said, "they are cheap and sell. The kids that buy them don't know what's good, they just buy it because it's cheap and then go tell their friends and we get more business." Ever wonder why good pedals really aren't sold in music stores? THe kids that shop at the music stores just buy what's cheap and affordable, kids today and popular bands today don't care about tone anymore. Nobody can argue me on that one. Back to the pedal, don't waste your money on it if you really care about your tone, this pedal doesn't kill your tone, the makers of it made it just to sell to kids who don't care about tone, scoop their mids and boost the highs and lows. I've never rated a pedal on this site so poorly ever, I've tried or had some bad distortion pedals, but the Digitech Hot Head is by far the worst distortion pedal I've ever had! It's really that bad. Can't believe I'm actually giving a pedal I've had a 1, can't believe I bought something so terrible! Help us all! What's happen to music today!?!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
This question is like a joke for Digitech's line of distortion pedals! I bet it would last a while, but who'd actually want to be heard using this thing? I'm not rating this, it works fine, but just is not reliable in tone.
Customer Support
:
6
I've contacted Digitech a few times, if your question is very easy, they get back to you quickly. If your question is complex or more educated, expect a few days, maybe a week. Pretty sad, fire the kids working there, get some real techs and pro's!
Overall Rating
:
1
If you are wondering about my equipment, here it is: Guitars: Gibson Les Paul Supreme, Gibson Les Paul Black Beauty without Bigsby, various Epiphone Les Paul's and one Epiphone Flying V, Fender Standard Strat and Tele, and Peavey HP Sign. EXP. Amps: Peavey Classic 50 head with cab, Peavey Transtube Supreme with a custom made cab, Fender Tone Master, old Fender combo amp 15 watts, and an old Crate 30 watt amp. Pedals:*just a list of some pedals I have and/or had, not all of this is on my custom board* Various Dunlop wahs, Vox V847 wah, Morley wah, Boss DS-1, Boss SD-1, Boss Blues Driver, Boss HR-2 Harmonist, Boss Turbo Overdrive, Boss DS-2, DOD Flanger, arious delay pedals, Digitech Whammy WH-4, Danelectro talk box, Rocktron Banshee, various chorus pedals, and more. My pedalboard doesn't even have half of them on it. I've probably owned more distortion pedals than most people have ever even tried out, I didn't even list all the distortion pedals I've had, I just listed what I could think of off the top of my head, most of which are very good pedals. Can't say it's the guitar or amp I used with the Hot Head, it came down to the pedal itself. If it wouldn't sound good on one of my amps, it won't sound good on any. I've been playing guitar for somewhere in the area of 12 years, why I even bought the Digitech Hot Head is beyond me, one bad mistake, luckily I could bring it back though. I don't really like Digitech pedals, they are copies off of other companies and they pretty much ruin them. The only good Digitech pedal I can actually say is good that I have and used is the Whammy, crazy pedal but kills tone, had to put a true bypass in it. The only other good Digitech pedal I can recommend, I bet you the Jimi Hendrix Experience pedal that is going to be out soon is going to be good, can't wait for it any longer. Overall, pretty much stay away from Digitech, even their huge multi effects pedals suck, they are digital pieces of crap, I've tried them before, it was even a waste of my time, how sad is that! Some Digitech pedals could be good, I don't really know which one(s), but I'd never buy any of them except the Hendrix pedal. But, the Hot Head was and is a joke, somebody probably already said that, but it's true. Anyone want to argue about this review, go ahead and do so, but think before you do so, if you scoop your mids and boost your highs and lows and think your Hot Head sounds good, don't even waste space on this site, you aren't a musician, you're most likely a "cool" kid who picked up guitar in high school to be cool and believe you are great when you aren't. Oh yeah, did I mention that Digitech's Hot Head distortion pedal is a disgrace? I could probably find a super cheap distortion pedal from some company like Arion or something in that area that sound better, that's pretty pathetic. Once again, can't believe I have owned something that I am reviewing and giving a 1, that's unbelieveable, proof that it's a waste of money, I'm never this harsh on pedals. But then again, I've never heard something so bad.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $39.95
Submitted 03/04/2005
at 06:27am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
6
Easy to use, four knobs.
Manual is OK, no suggested settings.
Sound Quality
:
1
The paint color of this unit is very similar to the Boss DS-1.
Unfortunately so is the sound.
I am using this pedal with my Fender 64 custom Vibroverb reissue and a strat.
Ice pick high end, when I dialed an almost usable tone on my rear pickup, I switched to the front pickup only to be greeted by mud.
Reliability
:
9
I have used a few Digitech products in the past and have always been happy with the quality.
This looks like a well built unit. I just don't like the sound.
Customer Support
:
6
I have never had to contact Digitech.
There website is fairly informative.
Overall Rating
:
2
I play Rock/Blues. I have been playing over 20 years, I own to much gear to list.
I like the fact that Digitech is offering some budget minded pedals, and I have read many reviews on this website about the Bad Monkey Overdrive unit and how nice it is. I own a FullDrive 2 which has that tone covered so I was looking for something with a little more gain for some of the other music I cover. Thought I'd give this pedal a try.
I hate to give it the lowest rating because tone is such a personal thing, but for me this unit is unusable.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $46 (including tax)
Submitted 02/05/2005
at 05:48pm
by Gopal
Ease of Use
:
1
The knobs would make it seem easy to use, you would think. I'm really pissed with this pedal right now, and I have been since my return period with guitar center expired. I can't get a single... not one single good tone out of this waste of $40. More in the next section.
Sound Quality
:
1
Here's my setup: I use either a Carvin CM130 or a Fender '57 RI Strat through a DOD Stereo Phaser, a Boss CH-1, then into a Marshall JCM-900 4501. When I demoed this at Guitar Center, I demoed through a DSL 40W combo. The sound there sucked, but I gave it the benefit of the doubt and took it home to check it on my amp. I didn't get a chance to get back to GC before the return period expired, so I got shafted.
This is capable of getting not one single desirable tone (at least in my rig) at gig levels. The EQ is so sensitive that it's useless. If the Hi and Low EQ are both at 12:00, the thing's high end is grating and harsh. If you even touch the low end to move it to 1:00, then play a chord, prepare to sound like a trombone through a distortion box. It's not pleasant, and reminds me more of a loud burp than a guitar.
Now, at bedroom levels, this is alright. Nothing special, but alright. However, any gear I buy nowadays is meant for being gigged with, and all pedals/stompboxes should be performance quality.
Put short: DO NOT BUY THIS PEDAL IF YOU PLAN TO GIG WITH IT! GET AN IBANEZ DISTORTION OR INVEST A LITTLE MORE AND GET A RAT OR SUPER OVERDRIVE!
Reliability
:
8
It's housed in a metal chassis like all Digitech or Boss pedals. It sucks that I actually want to break this thing into smithereens but I can't.
But again, you don't want to have to depend on something that sounds as bad as this.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A. Just emailed them about the pedal, asking if maybe something is wrong with it, or if there are some recommended settings I could try. I'll give them a few days before I say yay or nay.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I play all styles except punk, but my main styles are grunge, metal, blues and jazz. No, this doesn't do any of these styles at a legit standard.
I've been playing for around 5 years. I have (in chronological order of purchase): Squier Affinity Strat, Fender Frontman 10, Boss CH-1, Dano Pastrami Overdrive (don't buy this either), Epiphone G-400, DOD Stereo Phaser, Fender '57 RI Stratocaster, Marshall JCM-900 4501, Morley Classic Wah, and a Carvin CM130.
I compared this to a Boss DS-1 and a Digitech Screaming Monkey. I had gone to Guitar Center to get an Ibanez distortion pedal, but they don't stock anything but TS-808 reissues.
Please, please please do yourself a favor and buy a different distortion pedal. The only pedal from Digitech worth buying is the Whammy pedal.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $39.95
Submitted 01/05/2005
at 02:59pm
by Steve
Ease of Use
:
8
4 knobs, volume, low, high, and gain. Easy to use, but not easy to get a good sound out of.
Sound Quality
:
5
I bought this thing expecting it to be like my Boss DS-1, but maybe alittle bit more versatile and a bit more gain... I made one HUGE mistake! This pedal is DECENT, it's nothing special like all the other reviewers make it seem. There is a bit more gain than my DS-1, but the tone of this pedal is terrible. I didn't get any excess noise due to my very quiet setup, but the pedal itself is very quiet too. I saw that someone said this sounds like a fuzz pedal, this thing is NOTHING like a fuzz pedal at all, whoever that reviewer was, is a comlete IDIOT! If you want fuzz, go out and get a Fuzz Face or E.H. USA Big Muff Pi. I returned the Hot Head a few minutes after I bought it. It's really not good at all, for probably the same price, or less, you can get a ppedal that is so much better than the Hot Head, Boss's DS-1. Trust me on that one, the DS-1 has a better range in tone even with it's one knob as the tone control. The Hot Head may have a tiny bit more gain, but the pedal overall is not worth it. It's only $40, but sounds like a $10 distortion pedal made by some unheard of brand. Try it out yourself, you might like it if you really don't care about tone.
Reliability
:
8
I only own a Digitech Whammy pedal, and that's the only Digitech pedal I will use or buy. They seem reliable, some just aren't reliable in tone. Would I use it on a gig or for practicing, No, because it sounds terrible and I returned it back to the music store a few minutes after I noticed the pedal can't dial in any good sound.
The battery compartment is accessable in an odd way, they should have taken Boss's way or made a better/easier way, but I use a One Spot Daisy Chain adapter for my pedals. It is just a stupid way to get to the battery compartment, and you have to have something small to push the little thing in. I am only rating it an 8 on the construction of the pedal, not the tone of it.
Customer Support
:
7
They either respond in a day or quicker, or take a few days, you never know.
Overall Rating
:
5
This pedal is a bad copy off of the Boss DS-1, they just gave you the low and high EQ instead of the one knob EQ. Which, the DS-1 is still, byfar, better. Try it out yourself, you might like it, I didn't, I'm sticking with my DS-1, it's 10 times better.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/22/2004
at 12:09am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
easy... IGNORE the flames from unexperienced players.
Sound Quality
:
10
Some guy said this was a fuzz pedal and not distortion. Apparently he has an ear infection. Maybe it's because he's playing on a solid state amp. Anyone who has gone from solid state to tubes will definately notice how fuzzy solid state sounds. Anyways another person asked: If we can buy tube amps why buy something like this. My response: The same damn reason! TOO SOUND DIFFERENT!
I get sick of seeing crappy reviews on a pedal when they try to turn a $99 solid state special into a Full stack. They reason you think it's fuzz is because your amp is fuzz. Play a tube amp sometime and you'll notice how the fuzz isn't there anymore. That's why you sound so crappy and one dimensional. This pedal kicks ass. It's analog except for the emulated line out.
Reliability
:
10
Tough
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $40.00
Submitted 12/14/2004
at 10:06am
by Zombo
Ease of Use
:
9
Was looking for a basic distortion pedal that wouldn't break the bank...this fit the bill wonderfully. Couldn't be easier to use.
Sound Quality
:
8
It's a one trick pony, but that's what I wanted. None of the B.S. "morphing" or "cab sim" dials found on other pedals. I play a Gibson SG Special (490s) into an Ampgeg VL-1002 (Lee Jackson). Again, this is basic distortion. Not an overdrive pedal (I use my B channel for that). Someone said it's a fuzz, but to me fuzz is more like a Dallas Arbiter or Sovtek Big Muff, both of which I use. I needed some basic distortion and got it here. Good low end, but dial back the highs to around 9 o'clock unless you want the neighborhood dogs to beat a path to your door. Haven't tried the direct-to-record output and probably never will.
Reliability
:
9
Built solid. Way better design than that of 10-15 years ago...you pretty much had to go with Boss back then.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Don't know...don't care. At this price, if it breaks, replace it.
Overall Rating
:
9
For what I wanted, this pedal is perfect for the price. Been playing on and off for 25 years and have gone through a pile of pedals...this one's a keeper. But you be the judge; try it out next to Digi's other pedals and Boss's stuff and get the pedal (and sound) that you want.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $39.95
Submitted 11/14/2004
at 11:00pm
by A non Emuss
Ease of Use
:
9
Basic operation -- 4 knobs and a footswitch -- doesn't get much simpler
Sound Quality
:
2
Using humbucker equipped, mahogany bodied, set neck, LP copy and a REAL cheap solid state amp. After listening to the demo sounds on digitech's web site, I changed my mind on getting a Bad Monkey pedal and got this one instead. I was hoping to get a Marshall stack sound for 39.95 -- didn't work out. I have to assume that digitech was using a tube amp to acheive the sound on their web site, cause I sure can't get it with a solid state amp. I'll have to admit that it wasn't realistic to expect $1,000.00 worth of tone for forty bucks -- but I figured if the pedal to amp didn't work, I could use the direct out to my Tascam PocketStudio. That was even less impressive than the tone through the amp -- definitely not a sound worth recording.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
too new to tell
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
haven't used them yet
Overall Rating
:
2
If you're running budget gear -- you might want to try something else. If you have the money to spend on your choice of tube amps and 1/2 or full stacks -- why would you want to buy something like this? It's a fuzzy, one-dimensional sound (not very musical at all),and won't get you a big sound on a small budget. But on the plus side -- you'll only be out forty bucks!
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $39.00
Submitted 11/11/2004
at 05:44pm
by John-Long Island
Ease of Use
:
9
It is very easy to use. It is pretty basic control wise. Level and EQ settings. You don't need to be a rocket scientist to use it.
Sound Quality
:
1
I am using a Epiphone Les Paul Standard with Dimarzio Super Distortions in it and a Gibson Les Paul with EMG '81s. The sound coming out of it defies logic. I really want to know what they used on the web site to get those sound clips because in real life I could not get anything but *$#@ out of it. I had it in front of a Line 6 Spider II and also a couple of Marshall combos. I can sum up the sound of this by what my 8 year old daughter said when she heard me playing with it. She said "Daddy, that sounds really bad. It sounds like a broken radio!" Enough said!!!
Reliability
:
9
Built really strong, you could drop it alot and it would still work if that's what you call it! No gigging with it since I would not want to be laughed off the stage playing that!!!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Don't know, never used it.
Overall Rating
:
1
5 minutes after I tried it, it got packed back up and I returned it. I replaced it with the Death Metal pedal, What a difference!!! To sum up my experience with it, I returned it to Guitar Center for exchange and while I was parked in their lot my car got smashed into but some A*%hole who quickly left and left me with about $1000.00 worth of damage. Great!!! If only this pedal was better I would have a nice guitar sound AND an undamaged car!!!! This pedal cost me ALOT!!!!!!
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $39
Submitted 10/31/2004
at 10:26pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
The usual: Level, Low, Hi, Gain. A monkey could get something usable out of it. Like the Bad Monkey and the Screaming Blues (from the same product line), the Hi and Low use filter/cut for the first half of travel, and active boost for the second. Very easy to tweak back in the exact sound of your tube amp (dunno 'bout solid-state) then dial gain from there, or add volume with level. Pretty sweet at any price ... amazing at $39.
Sound Quality
:
9
In searching for a new OD/Dist box, I have played the True Grit, Barber Direct Drive, Voodoo Sparkle Drive, TubeWorks Tube Driver (2 versions), MXR Zack pedal, and all the Boss pedals, and nothing yet has bested this simple, inexpensive pedal in the following areas: noise level (it's VERY quiet), tone suckage (absolutely NONE), warmth (more 'tube' than the TubeWorks), and ability to sound like another channel on your amp. Maybe the over-$200 units will fare better, but nothing yet has convinced me to spend three times this much for not as much pedal. This little box, just like the Bad Monkey and the Screaming Blues, will amaze anyone willing to spend a little honest time with a good tube amp. Running from a Strat copy with Mighty Mite pickups to a Peavey CLassic 30, I run a Bad Monkey into the Hot Head and have been able to dial in for a warm, low noise, two-channel distortion box that rivals any of the hi-dollar stuff. It's a winner in every way, even at three or for times the price.
Reliability
:
9
The usual ... will survive nuclear Winter, along with the roaches.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had ... so I dunno.
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for 30 years, many of them semi-professionally. I'm playing heavy Southern Blues/Rock right now and this is as close to a cranked British-style amp as I can afford right now, and it gets the job done. I consider it a poor man's V-Stack or Rust Driver. It won't do metal, but it will get the job done for everything up to hard/classic rock. Just remember to use it on a clean amp to lessen the noise hit. It gets a NINE all the way around cuz noting at twice the price can touch it.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $39.99
Submitted 10/16/2004
at 09:31am
by FenderGuy
Ease of Use
:
9
Simple to use...gain, level, high, low knobs. Pretty standard stuff.
Sound Quality
:
9
I plugged this into a an old Laney pro-tube head and Marshall cab with a Fender Fat Strat. The first thing that struck me was the distortion had a very fuzzy quality to it. This thing is great for 70s hard rock...Hendrix, Sabbath, Zep. It was also very high-endy and thin. I had to back way off the highs and crank the lows up. Then with the mid-boost on my Laney amp, I was able to dial up a great punchy distortion. A mid-range knob would benefit this thing greatly. Once I got it dialed in, I was hooked. It has enough gain to play most rock/metal and isn't overly noisey like a lot of pedals. Right now it has replaced my Boss DS-1, which I've been using for years. It also has a cabinet simulator but I' haven't toyed around with that yet and probably won't as you won't find one that works well in this price range.
Reliability
:
8
These look like they were modeled after the Boss pedals and should hold up pretty well.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
9
I mostly play 70s/80s rock/metal. For me, this pedal is a winner. You can dial up some vintage sounding distortion very easily. It's not overly noisey and seems to be built fairly well. It's more than I expected for the $40 bucks I paid for it.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $39.99 + tax
Submitted 09/28/2004
at 02:26pm
by Jordan Delonge
Ease of Use
:
8
this pedal isnt very good. its easy to use and dial in a tone for all your own but i dont recommend it to anyone.. infact if you buy this sell it to some stupid kid who just started playing the guitar!
Sound Quality
:
4
i have a line6 spider 112 50 watt and i use my Delonge Stratocaster and my Squier M77 its difficult to keep the same level of sound switching guitars and the tone on a clean channle is very weak and thin sounding... although its a great booster if your on a distored channle. it gets noisy if you stand to close to it... but its good if you want feedback!
Reliability
:
9
its heavy and built like a tank so i dont know why you could throw it around alot and still depend on it working... ive only had it for a week or 2 but i should think that it would be very dependable years from now
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never used it
Overall Rating
:
6
I play almost anything... pop punk to rock to metal and everything inbetween. ive been playing for a little over 2 years and ive used a couple pedal here and there but i seriouly wouldnt recommend this to anyone if it were lost or stolen i would probably care less about it only cuz i used it a total of 5 times and put it back in the back to be returned... i would spend the time to find a better digitech pedal GO FOR THE BAD MONKEY OR THE SCREAMIN BLUES if you want a nice cheap but great buy from digitech
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $39.99
Submitted 09/27/2004
at 08:25pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
This box is straightforward, easy to use and work out sounds with. (the manual, 8 pages long, two of which cover replacing the battery, reflects this). Gain, Low and high tone controls, and level. It's got a stong steel case like Bosses' and rubber anti-skid top and bottom.
Sound Quality
:
9
I play a Strat Plus with an old-style Seymour Duncan "quarter pound" single coil at the bridge, the rest are Lace Sensor Golds. My amp is a Peavey (all tube) Classic 50/410 which has a nice bluesy drive channel (think of Leslie West doing "Mississippi Queen"). The Hot Head can dial in more drive with more grit and more "scoop" ala Judas Priest/Screaming for Vengeance. I really like it's classic range of distortion tones. I can get a much fatter, Humbucker style tone from it. I can also get a nice smooth Srat/neck-pickup SRV tone that's actually better than my drive channel, because the slightly fuzzy quality of the Hot Head softens up the rather glassy tone that the Lace Sensors have. But if you play with a lot of attack like I do, you get REAL tone, not fuzziness. I've been searching for those qualities for a long time.
Of all the times I've seen that cliche' "it's like having a full stack in a ---", this one actually does a good job of it. It's indescribably better than the distortion in my old, used 2730 Hot Box, and DOD Overdrive Plus. No mush, good bass response, no fuzzing together of chorded notes, especially in the low strings. And it doesn't color my amp's tone too much.
It's good for blues, classic rock, classic metal and could even be used for thrash, although thats not my thing. It's not "the box that will give you saturation from Hell" but......it can approach that.
I get a fair amount of noise from it, but then I have an unshielded bridge single coil..it's much less than the 2730 though.
I can't speak for the direct-to-mixer output with cabinet emulation, I haven't used it..
Reliability
:
8
Haven't had it long, but I wouldn't be afraid to kick it around a stage..or anywhere else...
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't had it that long
Overall Rating
:
10
My tastes, and playing, run from the Fabulous Thunderbirds to AC/DC to John Lee Hooker, to Iron Maiden, to Sheryl Crow.....I'd say Digitech described it right when they called this a "multi purpose distortion pedal." This box is excellent for the price,
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $30.
Submitted 09/06/2004
at 08:18am
by Kelly James
Email: none
Ease of Use
:
8
Easy to use but I can't get any classic tones from it.
Sound Quality
:
2
THIS IS A FUZZ not an overdrive not a distortion
THIS IS A FUZZ with a treble and bass control tacked on.
And the speaker sim cuts bass and sounds like a cabinet WITH
A BLANKET OVER IT
Reliability
:
No Opinion
HEY IT looks cool and is heavy and well built and it doesn't cost much.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Digitech does some very interesting things. This is not among them.
They also do some terrible things. All their speaker sims sound
Horrible to me. Just muffled tones with wierd midrange resonance.
And why can't they make an EQ or a pedal tuner?
Overall Rating
:
2
Some punks might like it as tones are moving these days towards FUZZ.
If you are looking for classic tones like Van Halen or ACDC forget it.
This thing is a fuzz with treble and bass added.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $40
Submitted 08/01/2004
at 11:45am
by Rob
Email: GtrGns12<at>comcast dot net
Ease of Use
:
9
This thing is pretty straight forward with Level, Low, High, and Gain knobs. Getting a killer heavy distortion is at the touch of your fingertips or just a straight forward blues tone. It doesn't get much easier.
Sound Quality
:
8
I played an Ibanez AX220 and ran it through a Fender Champion 30 and it sounded great. I put it through my Peavey Bandit with and extension cabinet and was blown away by the tone. his thing has some bottom to it. Instead of one tone knob that either gives you a real muddy sound or nasally sound you can have any mix of Lows and Highs. If there was a Mid EQ this thing would be perfect.
Reliability
:
10
I use a daisy chain for my effects pedals so I can't tell you if it eats batteries or not but DigiTech puts together a nice sturdy pedal that could probably be dropped off a building and only end up chipping the paint. This thing was built to last. I've had a DigiTech Digital Delay for over a year now and have no problem with it. I think DigiTech is on the verge of replacing Boss's single pedals.
Customer Support
:
9
Haven't dealt with them yet and I hope I don't have to but all of their pedals come with a warranty so they back themselves up.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play all different styles from jazz to progressive stuff and I wanted a straight forward distortion pedal and this thing delivered. I've been playing for 14 years and I got tired of my old Boss GT-3 because none of the levels are ever the same, so I switched to single pedals. If I lost my Hot Head, I would definitely go out and buy another. I was very impressed with the new DigiTech distortion pedals. This is a great pedal for a great price.
Product: DigiTech Hot Head Distortion
Price Paid: US $40
Submitted 07/25/2004
at 10:05am
by DoctorJ
Email: douglasjordan at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
9
Like most any distortion pedal, very easy to use. Level, Low/High EQ and Gain controls. Cabinet and normal outputs. Manual is sufficient.
Sound Quality
:
7
When I first connected it, I was very disapointed. Using a Gibson Les Paul custom 498/490 pickups it was muddy and overdriven with bass. I could not get the sound that DigiTech has on their website. Switched to a Kramer with EMG HZ H4s and its sounds were much more acceptable (EMG HZs have less output). You cannot get a scooped sound from the EQ. It appears the EQ low and high frequencies are contiguous, so if you raise both you continue to get a flat sound with a greater level. Turn down the high with the low passed the mid point and it gets very bassy, from which you can turn up the gain and get more harmonics for highs. Saw the same results from different tube and solid state amps. You can get a usable crunch sound. I would use this on an amp that does not have good built in distortion.
Reliability
:
9
DigiTech pedals are rock solid. This new design is built much like Boss pedals where an entire section of metal goes up/down to enable/disable, unlike the older designs that use a plastic button. Never had a DigiTech pedal fail.
Customer Support
:
9
Never had a problem.
Overall Rating
:
7
This distortion pedal is "OK". I bought it because it was fairly inexpensive and wanted to check out the latest from DigiTech. I have been playing for over 20 years. I wish this pedal had a greater frequency separation between low/high and a mid control. Digitech and DOD seem to be stuck with only 4 knobs, if you get a mid control there is no gain control with their other distortion pedals. Without a gain control you must turn down your guitar volume to lower the gain, however this typically reduces the bottom end of the output as well.
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