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Fulltone Distortion Pro

Summary
Similar Products Fulltone Fulldrive2 MOSFET Overdrive/Clean Boost Guitar Effects Pedal @ Musician's Friend
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Pro Co RAT2 Distortion Pedal @ Musician's Friend
Manufacturer URL http://www.fulltone.com/
Ease of Use 7.7 (147 responses)
Sound Quality 8.3 (152 responses)
Reliability 9.6 (122 responses)
Customer Support 8.6 (70 responses)
Overall Rating 8.3 (141 responses)
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Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/14/2009 at 10:09pm by tone_connoisseur

Ease of Use : 2
Very easy to tweak the knobs, but there is no great sounds usable so im giving it a 2.

Sound Quality : 1
We tested this on a 6100 4x12 Marshall and this is the worst pedal that we've heard. Guitar used was an ibanez PGM301 loaded w/ paf pros.

All the worst tones in a pedal in a small package!
- fizzy & cheap sounding.
- fake/sterile sounding
- too many knobs and no good sounds
- did I mention fake sounding?

Reliability : 8
Looks durable but the sound ain't usable.

Customer Support : 1
Fulltone is the ICON of 'no aftersales support' so i'm giving them:

1

Overall Rating : 1
I have a fulltone OCD and it's good, but this.. this pedal is the worst ever!

Even if it sold at a price of $10, I still wouldn't buy it.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 02/16/2009 at 02:37pm by jc

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy. EQ responsive with saturation being X factor in tweaking sound.

Sound Quality : 9
My setup is a 79 Strat, MIJ 93 50's re-issue tele & a ESP Eclipse customized with passive PAF humbuckers through a Fender Vibrolux & Fender Pro Jr Amps. I also use a Mesa Pre-amp pedal, a Vox Wah, a Xotic BB Preamp, MXR Carbon Copy, MXR Stereo Chorus & Boss Compressor in my chain. The Distortion Pro is what it is. You are not going to get great blues and clean tones out of this but usable clean tones can be dialed in. It is a Vintage Marshall like tone for musicians using clean tube tones who desire an occasional Marshall tone without buying another amp. Like any pedal it's tone varies on "your mood" when you engage it. Somedays it sounds great & other days it just sounds OK. Overall, sounds very good for what it does. Classic marshall like rock tones.

Reliability : 9
Built like a truck. My mid knob broke in half but I don't care because it doesn't effect it's usability.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never used them.

Overall Rating : 9
Kind of a one trick pony but very useful as a tool for higher gain marshall like sounds.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/25/2008 at 12:36am by This1smyne

Ease of Use : 9
easy plug and play, but tons of options if you want them. the settings in the manual are a great starting place, i actually really liked this pedal. great drive unit.

Sound Quality : 9
I was running this into a Framus Ruby Riot and a fender deluxe. sounded great. Fulltone does the overdrive distortion thing really well. clear and punchy. you have to be careful with teh eq or you can kill the sweet spots, but at the same time they overlap slightly to let you get exactly what you're looking for if you spend time with it. hard to change things up because some knobs were really small and hard to turn or see where they were live, but great if you are looking for one sound to stay solid all night long.

Reliability : 10
fulltone quality. this thing was packed too, weighed like 3 pounds and is a small unit.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
I was pleasantly surprised by this unit. if i didn't send it to my buddy in europe to try (and they didn't discontinue the pedal) i would still have it. this is one that i wish i still had.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: USD 140 USED
Submitted 06/24/2008 at 05:39pm by Jack
Email: postbluntmusic<at>gmail dot com

Ease of Use : 9
It may be more difficult for some, but I did my homework so it took about 5 minutes for me to dial in the tone that I have read so much about with this pedal. Just put your amp on clean channel, then turn the volume at about half way, distortion turn it down, and the little knobs put them at 12, and tweak from there it won't take long.

Sound Quality : 10
I have a Fender 65 Super Reverb Reissue with a G&L Legacy
I started to give it a 9, but honestly it is a 10. I can't believe how much Marshall like tone, and drive this pedal gives my Fender amp. I considered buying a second amp , but now I don't have to, and I saved 1900 bux in the process. If you want to know how it sounds got to www.myspace.com/postblunt and listen to the solo's on Hell's Doorman

Reliability : 10
I wouldn't worry about it from everything I know about Fulltone now it's not an issue.
No fear of not having a backup.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with them, but I hear they're not difficult.

Overall Rating : 10
I play, Metal, Punk, Alternative, and this does them all.
I've been playing for 12 years, and this is the best pedal I've owned,
I would replace it in the blink of an eye if it were misplaced.
I love that it makes my Fender sound like a Marshall.
I'm not crazy about red, but thats the only thing i'm not completely smitten with about this pedal.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/09/2008 at 02:40pm by Gearhead

Ease of Use : 10
What a nice pedal! Great looking too in that candy apple red!
Great versatility all the way from a nice clean boost to real
nice distortion capabilities. You can really sculpt your tones
with the 4 little knobs under the level and distortion knobs.
You've got "resonance" (bass frequencies) "voice" (mids and more)
"highs" (self explanatory) and "saturation" (really varies the pick attack and sponginess).
Very interactive controls with a lot of sweet spots.
It cleans up REAL WELL when you lower your guitar's volume pot too!
It's one of the more transparent distortions I've heard. You really
hear your strings and guitar tone through it.

Sound Quality : 10
There is no discernable noise or hiss that I can hear.
I use it through a RI 59 Bassman LTD. and it works great with it.
Works great for a wide variety of music styles.

Reliability : 10
It's a Fulltone so yeah, I can depend on it. Mike Fuller is one
of the better boutique builders out there! I haven't used it long
but I expect no problems.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/06/2008 at 08:26pm by Josh Weiner
Email: jman7<at>cox dot net

Ease of Use : 6
I liked it's sound when I tried it out before buying it. So I suppose it's really easy to get a good sound out of it. With that said, there are a few more knobs than on many other distortion pedals, and they're all quite sensitive to slight adjustments. This allows for a lot or fine tuning--sculpting your sound. It's necessary to adjust gain and output settings depending on how hot you're running your amp. It's also necessary to adjust gain and output settings when switching between single coils and humbuckers. Adjustments to EQ significantly effect output and gain too. So it's not the easiest distortion pedal. I haven't found a bad sound though, not that I've been looking for one.

I found the sample settings provided in the manual to be very useful starting points for experimentation.

Sound Quality : 10
What setup (i.e. what guitars and amps) are you using this with?:

I alternate between a Les Paul Studio model and a Squire Strat. I use two Fender Blues Junior amps run in stereo with various other analog effects in front of the amps.

Is it noisy? On what settings?:
Higher gain settings are of course, noisy, especially with single coils. It is a distortion pedal with a lot of gain.

Are the effects weak or do they always sound great?:
The Distortion Pro is not weak. It can boost your signal enormously. I think it always sounds great. I think it sounds fantastic.

Can you get the sound of your favorite artists? Who are they?:
My favorite artists are legion, but they include Jimi Hendrix, Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, Santana etc. I also love a host of old blues greats (all of 'em). Really dig the Stones. Anyhoo, this pedal covers all of that territory capably.

With the distortion knob set to full CCW (absolute minimum)it can be used as a clean boost with a VERY responsive EQ. Moderate to low distortion (9:00 to 11:00) sounds great for Blues and Bluesy rock. 12:00 and above is seriously crunchy distortion for hard rock. When I say hard rock I'm thinking Hendrix, Led Zeppelin or AC/DC. Black Sabbath at most. The Distortion Pro isn't a pedal for modern high-gain sounds.

To utilize the full potential of this pedal in any setting one must place it in front of a tube amp with the power amp section cooking. I play mine through one or two 15 watt tube amps (Blues Juniors) with their master volumes (power amp section) cranked and volume (pre-amp section) set low (2-5, depending on how loud or quiet I need my basic tone to be). This provides a slightly overdriven sound than can become sparkling clean by rolling back the volume knob on my guitar. Engaging the Distortion Pro gives me my distortion sound (unless I'm using Fuzz) and to me it's beautiful. It makes my 15 watt Fender amps sound like a pair of cranked Marshalls. I believe this is exactly what it was designed to do and it does it superbly.

The Distortion Pro cleans up beautifully when I roll back the volume knob on my guitar. I set the Distortion Pro up for a crunchy distortion sound (from 9:00 to 12:00 depending on whether I'm using a strat or a gibson) with the guitar volume full up. Rolling back the guitar volume to around 7 gives me a nice overdrive sound. Below 5 is a boosted clean sound. A very versitile, great sounding pedal.

I believe I'm getting the results I'm getting at reasonable volumes because I'm using low wattage amps (they can be run hot and not be too god awful loud). Playing the Distortion Pro thru an amp that wasn't overdriven, or a non-tube amp (yuck!) wouldn't sound so good.


Reliability : 10
I've owned a total of 3 Fulltone pedals, and they are all extremely well built. They could very well outlast me.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I've no experience whatsoever with Fulltone customer support. This speaks to the reliability of their products I think.

Overall Rating : 10
I'm a blues/rock/funk/psychedelic player. I like jam/improv based music as well as just playing The Blues. I've been playing for 23 years and have owned an assortment of guitars amps and pedals. My current set up:

Les Paul or Strat into:

Ernie Ball Volume Pedal with tuner out > Snarling Dogs Super-Bawl Whine-O-Wah > Electro-Harmonix Tube Zipper > Fulltone Ultimate Octave > Fulltone Distortion Pro > Fulltone Fat Boost 2 > MXR Carbon Copy Analog Delay > 2 Fender Blues Junior amps.

My pedal board routing module allows me to have my MXR Carbon Copy Analog Delay (awesome pedal at a great price!) going to just one of the amps. I must say, my setup sounds so bitchin' I can hardly stand it. The Distortion Pro is an integral part and I use it a lot. The Ultimate Octave is a Fuzz pedal with an optional octave up (the Purple Haze guitar solo sound). The Distortion Pro covers all of my non-Fuzz distortion needs (blues and non-psychedelic rock).

I managed to pick it up for $100 used so to me the value for money ratio is very, very good. The list price new ($199.99) is high, but this is a top-quality pedal.

I tried out the GT-500, which is basically this pedal + a Fat Boost 2 in one pedal with the option to choose boost > distortion or distortion > boost. The GT-500 doesn't have the Saturation (compression) control and has a different midrange control (it's actually a wah pot). The distortion side of the GT-500 and the Distortion Pro sounded very similar. I actually liked the GT-500 slightly better, because of the midrange control--and I don't use much of the compression available in the Distortion Pro. However, since I already had the Fat Boost 2 and the Distortion Pro was available used at half the original price, I went with it instead of the GT-500. I have no regrets.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/05/2008 at 03:38pm by Michel
Email: m<dot>roosendaal1 at quicknet<dot>nl

Ease of Use : 9
Very easy to use. No problem finding a great tone, well under certain circumstances that is, which you can read below.

Sound Quality : 10
If you try it at home at bedroom/livingroom volume levels: it sucks!
But as we don't gig or rehearse there, it's no problem to me. This pedal comes to life at rehearsal/gig volume! I tried it at home through a small 15Watt solid state amp and it sounded like a broke DS-1. But I read the reviews about it sounding this way under these circumstances. So I took it with me to the rehearsals of my band and.....it kicked some serious butt! I even didn't touch the knobs and used it as I set it at home. It sounded somewhere between my Sonic Distorion and my TS-9. I was really impressed. My set-up: Ibanez Les Paul '78 and a Guyatone 100 Watt full tube bassman clone with only a clean channel through two 12" celestions. It also sounded great along with my (3) other dist/drive pedals I use. I'm a happy man!

Reliability : No Opinion
I have no idea, but it looks sturdy

Customer Support : No Opinion
no opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I play all sorts of music, from pop to rock to metal. I play over 20 years now. I do not consider this to be a stand alone metal pedal, but with an overdrive I'm pretty sure it does that job as well.
I was a bit sceptical at first, reading all these good and bad pedal reviews, but I'm happy I bought it anyway. This is the first drive/distortion pedal that made me go WOW! People that do not like it either only play at home, have no good amp/guitar to play, or need to get a doctor checking out their ears..


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: USD 200
Submitted 10/30/2007 at 08:58pm by Fins

Ease of Use : 7
Tone shaping knobs can be misleading - READ THE MANUAL.

Basically, resonance=bass, voicing=mids and highs=treble. However, they don't necessarily react as you would expect from a traditional EQ.

Start with your voicing and highs at 12:00, and your resonance at 8:00. Volume half way, distortion at 0. Start adding the resonance until your amp sounds full. Then, flavor with "Saturation" to taste. Otherwise your tone can easily turn muddy or fuzzy.

Sound Quality : 9
Play this pedal loud! It works best with a driven tube amp - don't even try with your Fender Frontman in your bedroom.

Fender strat --> Distortion Pro --> '65 Fender Twin Reverb Reissue

If your amp is bright, and you want a chunky rhythm tone, turn the distortion level to 0 and volume halfway. Back off on Saturation. Great chunky tone with both humbuckers or single coil. Otherwise, your low end will sound muddy or will get a fuzzy distortion sound that you read about below.

For lead, increase distortion and saturation for sustain and grittiness. Ripping lead tones cut through the mix.

I struggled with my tone for a few weeks because I just plugged it in, turned everything to 12:00 and tried playing. My low end was muddy and the high end was fuzzy. But give it some time, and you'll find your sweet spots.

Reliability : 10
Don't see any problems.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Not needed yet.

Overall Rating : 9
Great in front of a clean, high-end tube amp, just like it says on the website. Why the heck are you people playing a $200 pedal in front of your Crate of Peavey? Of course it sounds like crap.

Great match for a wide variety of rock, even some metal (not thrash or death metal - you don't need a pedal this nice to play that stuff - go buy a Metalzone).


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: USD 189.00
Submitted 09/29/2007 at 04:52pm by E.J.M.

Ease of Use : 7
This pedal does take a while to get used to. You have to spend some time with it, and you have to use it live to hear what it is truly capable of. I found the manual helpful, I used it as a starting point and then went from there. If you have little patience and like simple devices, you may want to look elsewhere. However, if you are willing to spend the time it has some very rewarding sounds available.

Sound Quality : 10
First of all, I agree with what the previous reviewer (Chris) has stated about this device. This pedal has gotten a lot of unfair negative reviews. I think many people were expecting a modern high gain distortion. This pedal gives you a vintage sixties slightly fuzzed-out Plexi tone.

I am using it primarily through a 73 Gretsch Chet Atkins Tennessean, which has the original Dynasonic single coil pickups in it (similar in tone to P-90's). I play blues and fusion style music, and use the DP for my lead tones. I did use the DP briefly with my Les Paul Standard, and the pedal was much fuzzier and more difficult to set up. I do think the pedal in its factory form is better suited to single coils or very low output humbuckers. If you have higher output pickups you should lower the gain using the internal trim pot.

That said, this pedal is a PERFECT match for the Gretsch, and gives me thick, fluid fusion style lead tones with the neck pickup, and nice powerful crunch tones from the bridge pickup. The pedal does not mask the tone of my guitar, it still sounds like a Gretsch, its just more aggressive. This pedal is also very quiet, and even at high gain settings does not produce excessive feedback with my hollow guitar.

I use this pedal through a Mesa Boogie Studio Caliber DC-2 Combo, a Mesa Boogie Mark 1 Reissue Head, and a vintage 1973 Fender Deluxe Reverb amp. The pedal sounds fantastic through all amps. I use a Fulltone Anniversary Mosfet Fulldrive for lower gain sounds, and a Fulltone OCD for higher gain rythm sounds. I primarily use the DP for solo and lead work. All pedals compliment each other very well, and I would recommend this type of three pedal setup to anyone looking for the best in vintage sounds, from low gain to vintage high gain.

My primary influences are Carlos Santana, Al DiMeola, Jimmy Page, and Gary Moore. The DP really adds a fatness to the notes that I have not gotten with other devices. Great pedal for classic rock, blues, and fusion style tones. I will say I have been using this pedal for several months now, so my review is not based on the "honeymoon period", but real experience both live and at home.

Reliability : 10
I have been using this at home, and live once a week for several months now, and have had no issues. Fulltone pedals are built for professionals, and are made to last. I expect no problems.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
This is not a pedal that will get you metal sounds, or ultra high gain sounds. This is vintage high gain distortion, like a Marshall Plexi, not a Marshall JCM 2000 or similar modern amp. You must tweak the pedal and spend some time with it, and dont give up on it until you have used it LIVE. It took me some time to find my settings, but now I dont mess with it, I just play.

I have been playing for 12 years now. I picked up the guitar at age 19 and was fortunate to have some amazing instructors. I used to focus on distortion, now I focus on getting each note to be as fat as it can be. I try to use just enough distortion to add fatness and sustain. If you follow this philosophy, which is fatness over distortion, you should check out the DP and other Fulltone pedals. One note, this pedal has been discontinued, so if you want a new one grab them while they are still available.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/11/2007 at 08:28am by Dave

Ease of Use : 9
This is a fairly easy pedal to use. Everything is laid out in front of you. Plug this pedal in between different guitars and amps and find your sounds. You don't really need a manual, just your ear. Start tweaking until you find the sounds that work for the guitar and amp you are using because different pickups, guitars, and amps will each respond uniquely to this pedal. Think of it as an artist's palate. Fuller gives you 6 controls on the pedal to shape your tone not to mention the controls on your amp and guitar. This isn't a plug n' play one-sound-fits-all pedal. It's an awesome tone tool. If you can't find several excellent tones using any combination of guitars and amps you have, give up playing music and go play a radio because you don't have the ear to create good sounds.

Sound Quality : 10
This is where this pedal shines. It is quality tone all the way through. Whether you are using single coils or humbuckers, all tube or solid state amps, you can find plenty of awesome tones in this pedal. Every pickup, guitar, and amp responds differently and requires it's own tweaking to get the tones you need. This pedal lets a Strat still sound like a Strat and a Les Paul still sound like a Les Paul.

Reliability : 10
I use it frequently and gig with it regularly. Never had a problem. Quality components. Especially, the switch. I've never had a Fulltone switch crap out on me.

Customer Support : 10
Very helpful. E=mailed for a manual for the DP-1 and got a .pdf of one, in just a few hours. Works for me.

Overall Rating : 10
I don't give many 10s because in my mind, there are only a few outstanding pedals. This is one of them. I've played guitar and gigged for over 30 years. Owned and played the original Big Muff, original Tube Screamer, Ratt, as well as countless other boutique distortion pedals. The Fulltone DP1 is one of the best pedals out there and is the only distortion pedal on my pedal board. (I have an overdrive (Rodenberg Gas) and a Menatone Red Snapper boost pedal on my board too, in addtion to my tube amp's crunch and lead tones.) Like I said above. This pedal is a tool that gives you 6 controls to shape your sound. If you can't get a good sound out of this pedal, it's not the pedal's fault. Rock on.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 08/08/2007 at 03:35pm by Chris

Ease of Use : 5
An inexperienced effect user or player may have a little trouble. Not instant gratification. One needs work with it in order to find all the great sounds.

Sound Quality : 9
I get a chuckle when I read the reviews on this pedal. Some talk about how the mass-produced Distortion pedals can be unnatural and lacking in good sound, and now that some one has produced a boutique Distortion pedal that delivers, people wonder why its not like a DS-1.
I think this is because there are a whole lot of use 30 somethings and younger that were weened on high gain distortion from solid state devices. Its one thing if you dont like the tone, but to say that its not what Fuller says it is, is just not true and clearly from the ill-informed. I think many of us just dont understand or havent heard what high volume tube distortion sounds like. I learned this myself trying to cop the George Lynch sound. I finally figured it out when I plugged my tube head, clean boosted, into a Greenback cab. There was the sound. A loud Marshall, clean boosted and into the greenbacks. Thats kinda what this pedal sounds like. I real thick, old Marshall, higher on the rock distortion side, than on the overdive side. If you want a bit more gain, or an edgier bass side, just run a TS into it. Also one thing to remember, its more important how you sound in the mix than in your bedroom! Thats where this baby delivers!

Reliability : 9
Very reliable....would not worry!

Customer Support : 10
Mike Fuller is a great guy, answered my emails in minutes. But he is busy and he make top of the line stuff, so he going to expect educated questions

Overall Rating : 9
If you want a distortion sound that gives you an old Marshall sound, only a little heavier then this is your pedal. It also great because you can boost it with a tube screamer to get a more modern sound, i.e. tighter, edgier bottom, that still has a lot of the vintage Marshall qualities. But before you buy, make sure you understand that its a Marshall sound, its not going to be like a newer high gain amp, that has that pre-amp distortion sound, it sounds like power amp distortion. I personally love it, cause I can get all the classic 80's metal like George Lynch, Warren DeMartini...I can get sort of a late 60's hard rock sound, 70's.....and with my Maxon TS and Fulldrive i can get a a slightly different take on modern heavy sounds.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: USD 199
Submitted 06/15/2007 at 02:39am by dc

Ease of Use : 8
I felt compelled to write about this pedal. I bought it on a whim, like some other writers, and was hugely disappointed at first...yes it can be a fuzz pedal...but...tinker with it a little...don't just write it off! I was just about to bring it back to where ever, then I found a good setting. Turn the "highs" knob all the way down then crank the other little knobs and find a level of gain you like. Mine fuzzed and hissed until I turned the highs down.....lots of potential features though

Sound Quality : 9
Once the highs was turned down I get this great woman tone kind of sound...thick & robust with enough juice to use often enough to keep. With my strat it doesn't sound like a les paul but definitely gives it a more humbuck like tone...with emphasis on the lows and mids. Ive come to like it alot.

Reliability : 10
I can't imagine this ever having problems.

Customer Support : No Opinion
n/a

Overall Rating : 9
My board is: e-ball mono volume>buddwah>homebrew germania>barber burn unit>OCD>Distortion pro>Keeley fuzz head>(all through a true bypass box) out through a barber launch pad...using a strat, les paul & first act sheena into a matchless clubman 35 and fargen blackbird. I keep the darker tone pedals toward the back and cascade them with the higher toned...all in all I have alot of different tones at my feet and the d-pro is a valid portion that makes awesome creamy tones that are functional in my pop rock band. Don't write it off so fast...give it a chance.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: Canadian 225.00 USED
Submitted 05/29/2007 at 10:44am by Chris Manuel
Email: chris<at>windsweptmedia dot ca

Ease of Use : 1
It's impossible to get a good sound out of it - until you discover the secret (duh!). It only sounds good when driving a tube amp that's already clipping. All of the criticisms you'll read here about it being a fuzz box are true until you get your amp good and hot (loud).

It takes a lot of tweaking even when you've found the secret. Don't be afraid to turn the mini-pots on the front through their full sweep. There are interesting sounds everywhere.

Also, the box is super sensitive to the amp: try plugging into a Deluxe Reverb's reverb channel in the higher gain input. Ouch. Then try plugging it into the non-reverb channel: much smoother.

Sound Quality : 8
When driving a tube amp with its power output stage saturated the Distortion Pro has that Marshall snarl without sounding fuzzy. The pedal responds really well to changing pick dynamics and attack, with the amp smoothing out the spikey-ness(?) of the pedal's inherent sound.

Fulltone's site suggests that the DP will get you to the sound of Eric Johnson or Allan Holdsworth: a lead tone that is pretty smooth. The Saturation control does a great job of smoothing out the dynamics but I would say the DP is not the most direct route to the Holdsworth/Johnson tones. If you stack your Tubescreamer in front of the DP with the DP set to a low distortion level things start to get interesting yield that smooth, sustaining tone the fusion players love.

Lastly, this is a gigging pedal, not a bedroom jamming pedal. It's voiced to cut through a rock band and will sound like crap until you play it loud.

Reliability : No Opinion
Fulltone has a well deserved reputation for building road worthy gear, with the exception of mini-pots on the Distortion Pro. The first run seemed to be made of Play Doh and deteriorated rapidly. This is fixed on new versions.

I would gig without a backup as it's unlikely to fail and I carry a TS-808 clone that would cover the territory if it did fail (not to say that a Tube Screamer sounds anything like the Distortion Pro).

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8
I play baby boomer music (blues, rock, jazz, fusion) on a Godin xtSA (high output strat sound), Godin Montreal (335 sound), and a Les Paul (like a Godin LGX ;-). I only use a Deluxe Reverb as I haven't found a clean tone to compare after several other Fenders, Boogies, Marshalls, Traynors ... you get the picture.

I've been playing thirty years as a performing amateur (I get paid now and then but not enough to feed the dog).

I would buy the pedal again, although I would try the GT-500 from Fulltone before buying as I use the DP with a Tubescreamer a lot ( the basic architecture of the GT-500 is overdrive into distortion).


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: USD 219
Submitted 05/15/2007 at 09:52pm by Jason Howlett

Ease of Use : 8
There are 6 knobs - not including the internal trimmers. You can be at this thing for days tweaking. That being said, this is not a "set and forget" pedal. Long ago, when the ADA Mp-1 was the rage everyone was saying how great it was to be able to fine tune the distortion to each and every room you played in. But that was a pain to do with the MP-1 but that benefit is derived in this pedal. You can easily adjust the overall tone from the pedal. I have to admit it does take some time with this pedal. This isnt really a pedal for amatuers.

Sound Quality : 9
I use this pedal with either a H&K Puretone head or a Hiwatt DR504 with a 4x12 Celestion cab. I also use on my board a Keeley Compressor, a Boss GE-7 e.q. a Fulltone OCD and a Keeley Modded Ad-9.
This pedal has the plexi Marshall thing cold. Simply put, that's what it does. The website does not lie. If you have a good tube amp with responsive tone controls than this thing will give you the great Marshall tone of yesteryear. Think AC/DC, Sex Pistols, some VH ( early ),Slash even some Allman Bros . I think this pedal gets a real bum rap on this site. It is a great pedal for what it does and that is it "Marshallizes" a loud , good tube amp. I think this part of the problem, most people dont know the open powerful sound of a good Ol' Marshall. It isnt a modern sound so fans of modern sounds probably are many of the disappointed. You can get Overdrive sounds and semi-Fuzz tones. This is not a holy grail do-it all distortion, but a good player with good equipment will tell you that this is a great pedal.

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank - No problem here.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I have 2 Fulltone pedals - I have had them both for a couple of years. I have had no problem with them so no reason for customer support. I know well enough to realize that Mike Fuller has plenty of friends & I am a customer.

Overall Rating : 9
I have been playing hard rock for 28 years. I went into a high end music store in NYC and asked " I got a great amp, what is the best distortion pedal to give me that classic Marshall plexi sound ? " I was sold this pedal and I can't complain. It is a great pedal for slide playing because of all the voicings that the controls provide. I have tried this pedal through a 6l6 amp and it seems more geared toward EL-34 type amps. So to recap - it does one thing ( plexi Marshall sound ) really well. It needs to be used with a good tube amp with responsive tone controls, and it needs to be played loud.
If stolen - I would get another one w/o question. Keep in mind it is a well made if not the best made Distortion pedal availiable.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/14/2007 at 08:22am by Serious Tone Lover

Ease of Use : 3
The pedal has two normal sized knobs for Volume and Distortion, and four tiny knobs marked by Resonance, Voicing, Highs, and Saturation. It should be simple to use, but it turned out that whatever effort I put into tweaking, the sound was really sub-standard. I can only conclude that it was not easy to use.

Sound Quality : 1
I bought the pedal after it received the Editor's Pick in Guitar Player a few years ago. That taught me a lesson about the reliability of so called "bench tests" in magazines: don't believe what you read!

The sound produced by this pedal was really, really bad. I tested it on a large number of high quality tube amps of various sorts, and on hybrid amps, and on transistor amps. The pedal consistently produced a sound of unacceptably poor quality. In fact, even the absolutely best tube amps in my arsenal sounded like cheapo transistor amps when engaging the Distortion Pro pedal. That was really unexpected, regarding the raving review in Guitar Player. This makes one think: what are the factors warranting a good review written by one of the journalists in a magazine? And what implications does an Editor's Pick have for the sales of a product? I bought my Distortion Pro solely on the basis of the review, but that was a huge mistake. After this, I have become really, really skeptical to any conclusion drawn in the magazine reviews, as they seem not to be objective at all.

Reliability : No Opinion
The four small knobs were flimsy and vulnerable. Otherwise, it looked sturdy.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with the company.

Overall Rating : 1
I have been playing the electric guitar for 28 years. I play mostly rock based improvisational music, and I own a motherload of seriously good equipment. My experimental duo plays a few gigs a year (alternative festivals, and some club gigs), and I perform solo about a handful of times a year. I am extremely critical when it comes to sound, and it soon became clear that the Fulltone Distortion Pro was a total miss from a sonic point of view. Therefore, I sold it, and I was glad I got rid of that hunk of junk. Instead, I spent some time testing alternatives, and I ended up with the fabulous BJF Dyna Red Distortion as my main distortion pedal. For lower distortion level (actually, more in the overdrive domain) I use a Klon Centaur.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: USD 218.00
Submitted 01/14/2007 at 01:56pm by Taylor Burns

Ease of Use : 5
This pedal is pretty difficult to get a good sound out off, all of the knobs are labled, but that doesnt seem to make it any eaiser. The manual is legit, contains three sample settings and blank spaces on the back for you to fill in your own settings. I even adjusted the trim pots turning them clockwise (less gain, mids, what have you) and it didnt seem to improve clarity or anything.

Sound Quality : 4
My rig is pretty straight forward, 90s tele standard(little 59 bridge pu), planet waves stompbox tuner, voodoo labs sparkle drive, holy grail reverb, phase 90, and a micro amp. All of that runs into my peavey classic 50. I purchased the pedal because fuller said it would make my tele "compete" with humbucker equipped guitars. Well it does a lot less than that. It seems as soon as you turn the gain up it is too much. And along with it comes this high end fuzz whenever you play. Ive tried and tried and cannot get rid of it. If youve read any other reviews that say fullers crazy this is a fuzzbox, well there right.. IT IS A FUZZBOX. The other guitar player in my band uses a full drive 2 and it sounds pretty good but i dont think ill ever give my business to fulltone again. This pedal is a very large letdown. Come on fulltone...honestly.

Reliability : 10
This thing is built like a tank, We should send these to iraq.. I would use a digitech deathmetal distortion before i used this at a gig...

Customer Support : No Opinion
I didnt even bother trying to contact fulltone, ive heard way to many bad things. People, please take your business elswhere. Places like robert keeley, radial, zvex...anything!

Overall Rating : 5
Im still really young (17), and ive only been playing guitar for like 4 years, but living in nashville with a band that plays out you have to know, and have, good tone. People, this isnt good tone. I think im going to go back to gc, get a tonebone, and then go out to lunch.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: USD 100 USED
Submitted 11/20/2006 at 11:18am by Joe Zebco

Ease of Use : 8
FYI, one of the knobs in the back is an input gain knob. If you're using high output pickups, the key is to turn this trim pot down to clean up the input stage of the clipping. Otherwise, you got Fuzz-central.

All those here saying they get a Fuzz-tone need to lower the trim pot down and then start tweaking the knobs in the front to dial in the ideal distortion sound.

Sound Quality : 9
Will always sound vintage, because that is what the pedal is. Designed to have a "tube-like" personality. It is quite frankly ironic, because tubes usually = warmth which is something those pedals coming out with the preamp tubes in them do not have.

Stop complaining that it doesn't sound "modern." Go buy a modern distortion box for that. If you want an all-in-one distortion pedal good luck. Personally, the all-in-one approach is a lost cause. No two people want the same things in their overdrive and distortion. So to make an all-in-one is setting yourself up for disappointment.

But I digress, the distortion pro is very toneful: fat distortion like you've never heard in a Boss, Ibanez, or what have you. You can go from fatter overdrives that the Fulldrive (TS808) really can't touch to a saturated Marshall distortion.

Reliability : 10
Will not break unless you submerge with lighter fluid and torch.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
Try it out before you let any of the reviewers here pre-judge what this pedal does and what it doesn't. We all know that you have folks that really know what their talking about and folks that don't know squat. Folks here that gig regularly with huge amps and folks here that play in front of a mirror with a tine 15-watter.

For both folks and all in between, you're going to get subjective reviews. No single piece of equipment is good for all. Try it out!


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 11/14/2006 at 11:17am by grOOve

Ease of Use : 6
Tweakable yes, but not in the right ways. For instance: I want to dial out the mids, how the heck do you do that? None of the knobs really can be used to scoop out frequencies. I want to make the distortion tighter with more of a Proco Rat like attack. How do I do this? Fiddled with the "Highs" knob and the Distortion knob that is supposed to control the first clipping stage. No luck. Messed with the trim pots in the back while sending a looped signal into the pedal thru the amp. Tweakability is a very sad thing on this pedal. Boss pedals are tweakable like an EQ pedal. The Distortion Pro's infinite knobs do not.

If you like the sound out of the box, then no problem.

Sound Quality : 7
"Not a FUZZ!" was the description on the Fulltone website. Mike Fuller needs to call me because we need to have a little discussion on what a Fuzz is and what Distortion is. Proco Rat = Distortion. Metal Zone = Distortion. DS-1 Distortion. Distortion Pro = FUZZ!

You gotta be kidding me. This is a Marshall Plexi classic 60's Fuzz-Crunch in a box. It is thick and has gobs and gobs of gain layered on top of gain. Think about a Proco Rat gain set at 3 o'clock where it starts to Fuzz out. The tweakability is all centered around this tone. The only palm muting you get with this is by putting a wah pedal in front and rocking it all the way forward.

Your treble strings will sound huge. Very thick and with lots of fat gain. However, the unmistakeble nature of the Fuzz gets very fat crunchy and loose on the bass strings - think 60s Cream, "Woman" tone. When you play chords all that thick fat gain intersects producing that classic Fuzz crunch. Your chords more or less sound like Hendrix "Purple Haze." You can absolutely nail this tone with this pedal.

Very good pedal for Solos; not so good for rhythm work. This is 60s Marshall NOT Mesa Boogie. Vintage not Modern. Eric Johnson not System of a Down. Sorry dudes, anyone that says modern distortion has got no tone - you all need get out of the 60s, 70s, and 80s. Music is progressive and evolving - learn to embrace it.

Reliability : 10
Like a tank in munchkinland.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8
It's not a bad pedal, but I'm giving it an 8 because the title and description don't fit the tone. I wish the knobs were straight forward like an EQ. But it is what it is and it does what Mike Fuller created it to do. You can definitely tell it's a quality tone that comes through. Anyone that says that you can get better distortion at a third the price is a moran. Let's face it, distortion pedals are cheap little gadgets to produce compared to this beast. Use it for what it is and get your $60 distortion boxes to play side-by-side.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/21/2006 at 10:22am by Randy

Ease of Use : 10
It's a labor of love with this pedal. Read the manuel it will gey you started buy showing you some starting points and what the knobs do. From there I found it easy to get great sounds and every time I what something a little differant a tweak or 2 and another great tone is there. I believe this is a 2001 version.

Sound Quality : 10
I have gottin SRV, Santana, Hendrix, and several great tones
from thi pedal. I play a SRV strat with Van zandt pickups mostly
and have used it with a Reverend Roco with humbuckers. No Hiss at all. Every knob works and they enteract with each other so you can always get that little extra you want or don't want. I play though a black face super and use this pedal occasionally at the gig for distortion at lower volumes.

Reliability : 10
This is indestructable. I'ts been strong for 3 years now.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't dealt with them and probly won't have to.

Overall Rating : 10
I can't believe I don't see people useing these or hear anything about them. IN the 30 years i've been playing This is the first dist. pedal i've kept over a year. I've had them all.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $150.00
Submitted 06/21/2006 at 12:43am by VH1

Ease of Use : 8
Very easy to use - More options than your standard OD/Distortion pedal. Manual is very useful and explains each function in detail.

Sound Quality : 3
This is my first Fulltone pedal. I took the shiny red pedal out of the box in amazement like Ralphie on Christmas Story with his new RR BB Gun. Like Ralphie I was Excited at first but left dissappointed - OK Enough you all know the story - The pedal is solid - I plugged it into the clean channel of a 100W Marshall JCM900 with 6L6 Sylvania Power Tubes and Mullard 12AX7 Preamp Tubes. I have a custom Mahogany Hamer with Dimarzio Fred Pups. The pedal is Quiet. Strong Volume and works great in bypass mode. I read the Manual and understand all the functions. I'M into Vai, Satriani, Rhoads and VH type tones - Couldn't even get close with this pedal. The word Distortion pedal really through me - more like Fuzz Distortion. The Gain in my opinion is not smooth - no matter what I did it made my humbuckers sound like single coils - very vintage tone - It's a great pedal but not for me - I'M into more modern tone - like a modded Boss SD-1 or Kelley TS9 Baked - Like I said the word Distortion through me + I figured with all the tone shaping knobs I could get my tone - couldn't get rid of that 60s "Spirit in the sky" or something like that tone - I checked the internal settings just to make sure they were factory set - they were not touched - I put the pedal back together and back in the box it went

Reliability : 10
The Pedal is Fulltone Quality and I'M sure it could survive livn' outside in a Florida Modbile Home Park next to a Gator Pool in the middle of Hurricane Season. I wouldn't use this in a gig unless it was 1969

Customer Support : No Opinion
I have never dealt with Fulltone - I'M sure their a Top Notch Company - It's made in USA and not Mass Produced - well maybe medium produced

Overall Rating : 6
Very Expensive - I can't even play it - I had to check the internal switches to make sure it was working properly - It' just not my type of tone - that doesn't mean it's a bad pedal - it just didn't work for me - The price should be lower and the name should be changed to Fuzz Drive 69 or something like that - I have a Fulltone Fulldrive 2 on the way - I hope that's better - I have been paying for 20 yrs. I own mostly Marshall amplifiers. If It were stolen I would be mad - only because I paid over $150.00 for this pedal - I would not buy it again - I'M mad because I bought it the 1st time. I love nothing about this pedal - I would love someone to buy it - my favorite feature would be to get my $$ back. I bought this pedal because it has the word Distortion in it + has a lot of tone shaping and it's a fulltone - I wish with all these knowbs you could make the tone Vintage or modern - It's just vintage - Fuzzy not smooth - very single coil sounding - not solid even on my low strings.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 02/05/2006 at 02:52pm by GuitarMan

Ease of Use : 9
After I read the manual and played with the adjustments, basically got to know how it functioned, it is easy to use. I feel that if a person does not understand how to use this or any piece of equipment, they will not get a good sound out of it.

Sound Quality : 10
After 30 years of using guitar effects, this is the best distortion I have heard.

Reliability : 10
I live on the road performing full time - it is my life - and the Fulltone pedals I have withstand the use of the road.You pay for the quality with Fulltone.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I have never had to contact them.

Overall Rating : 10
One thing for musicians to remember: Your sound isn't coming from the equipment, it's coming from your hands - you. If you can't pick up 5 different guitars all playing through different amps (or no amps) and have it sound good (meaning like "you") then you're bound to keep looking at the "tools" to make you sound better. With that said, this particular "tool" is of high quality and if the time is taken to understand how to use it, you can use it in any style of music and make it sound good.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $195
Submitted 01/24/2006 at 07:31am by Andrew Jones

Ease of Use : 9
Tuning this pedal in will take a little more time and effort but it'll be well worth it. The amount of flexability that Mr. Fuller has put into this pedal can be intimidating at first; but once you get the jist of how the controls interact with each other the possibilities are endless. Nothing fancy with the controls, just clockwise if you want more and counter-clockwise if you want less...

Sound Quality : 10
Merely pluging this pedal in and turning it on will give you a good tone . However, when you figure out how to effectively use all the "tweakability" this pedal has to offer, you will be amazed at the results. Even at extreme settings the distortion remains focused, even complex chords retain there harmonic content. After a few small, and I do mean small adjustments to the two trim pots on the inside of this pedal, the tone cleaned up extremely well when rolling of my guitar's volume. This gave me even more flexability, allowing those "in between" sounds that can give your playing a whole other relm of dynamics.

Reliability : 10
I,ve only gigged with this pedal for a couple of months now and have had no problems at all. I do however have a Fulltone FD-2 that i've used religiously for the last 2 years and not even the paint has chipped. I do try to take pretty good care of my stuff but i've dropped that pedal a few times and it has never missed a beat. I trully believe that Mr. Fuller is deticated to making a product that not only sounds good but will stand the test of time. I honestly don't even worry about the reliability of these two pedals, they are a joy to own and well worth the money I spent on them.

Customer Support : 10
This category is what led me to leave a review about this pedal. Although I was happy with the tones I was getting when I first plugged this in, I was having a little trouble getting the exact tone I was looking for. I emailed the company thinking maybe somebody in there sales staff could help me out. Mr. Fuller himself emailed me back and pointed me in the right direction. All of this took place in the same afternoon that I sent the original email. I was very impressed.

Overall Rating : 10
Although most of the Fulltone line, including the Distortion Pro is a little more money than other pedals of the same purpose, I consider it money well spent. There durability, tone, craftsmenship, and even customer support are in my opinion, among the best. I try to play as many different styles of music as possible and this pedal has given me a new sonic range in which to play. One thing I will suggest, if you buy this pedal used or in my case new but fail to get the manual, go to the website and download it. There are some very helpful tips in the back on adjusting the internal trim pots.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $189
Submitted 01/11/2006 at 03:38pm by S.A.R.

Ease of Use : 10
Turn Knobs clockwise to increase values, counter clockwise to decrease.

Step on switch to turn on and again to bypass.

Ease of use; this is a pedal not rocket science.

Sound Quality : 1
One of the most expensive distortion pedals I have hade the displeasure to buy before the try.

Please do not buy this pedal on word of mouth.

Give it a nice looonnnggg test drive.

Thank God for ebay.

Reliability : 10
Built like a Tank... but why?

Customer Support : 1
Needs improvment!


Overall Rating : 1
I have been playing 22 years, Rock/jazz/fusion/funk.

My favorite features hmm... nice shinny red paper weight, ergonmic rectangular hammer and tone destroyer.

I do own the Fulltone OCD and TTE and love them both but this one needs to be dropped from the product line.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $140
Submitted 01/03/2006 at 06:27am by Dave

Ease of Use : 9
Easy to use. I didn't need the manual to find great sounds. Fuller gives you six knobs (plus an internal pot) for a wide range of tone-tweaking. If you didn't find a good sound with this pedal using any guitar and amp combination that you can throw at it, then you probably didn't take the time to find your sound. This pedal sounds fantastic with any guitar and amp I have. All I have to do is tweak it for that particular setup. Only improvement I would like to see would be to the ability to adjust the internal trim pot on the outside of the pedal since I use this pedal with both single coils and humbuckers.

Sound Quality : 10
I play a '76 Les Paul Custom into a Peavey Ultra 212 with Celestions or an '83 Strat into a Music Man RD112. I was mainly looking for a good distortion for the Strat/Music Man combo and found it in spades with this pedal. It also sounded great with the Les Paul. The internal pot lets you adjust for the type of pickups you're using. Whisper quiet when off and no tone sucking. Let's the sound of your guitar shine through and doesn't mask it even when the distortion is heavy. It's my main distortion on my pedal board now and replaced my Keeley-modded Sparkle Drive. Keep in mind that this is a distortion pedal. It is perfect for classic rock. This is not a 60s fuzz face or a metal pedal, but it is a solid "10" for that creamy smooth sustain for classic rock leads or, when you back down the distortion, it's great for punchy classic rock rhythm chords.

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank with quality parts.

Customer Support : 10
Got a quick reply back to an e-mail asking about the internal trim pot.

Overall Rating : 9
I've been playing in cover bands for 30 years - mainly classic rock, with some 50s and 60s, and new stuff thrown in. This fit the bill perfectly for getting my Strat to sound fat with smooth, creamy distortion. For me, this pedal beat out a Keeley-modded Sparkle Drive and BD-2, both Jekyll and Hyde pedals, Maxon OD808, Zoom Hyper Lead, '83 Ibanez TS-9, and others. All very good pedals, but just not quite as good as the Fulltone DP-1. If stolen, I'd buy another one.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: Euros used
Submitted 01/01/2006 at 05:02am by anonimous

Ease of Use : No Opinion
Some tweaking is required if you compare it to a simple distortion box.

Sound Quality : 5
I'm sorry to disagree with many enthusiastic reviews here but to me this pedal is something of a disappointment. I would'n t call it a distortion pedal....to me it sounds more like an (overpriced)
fuzz box, with hardly any definition, no sustain and a lot of buzz
particularly on the lower strings.
I tried to tweak the internal trimmers but this didn't change my overall opinion about.I already own a Fulltone Fulldrive
and Fulltone Fat Boost,which are great, but a Keeley DS1 Ultra (which I have too) kicks the Distortion Pro out of
the window and costs half as much! I also tried a Carl Martin
Plexitone of a friend of mine, which ,for a few euros more,
puts the Distortion Pro to shame for sound and flexibility.
Fulltone products are generally great but this one is really not the case.

Reliability : No Opinion
Fulltone products are built like a tank.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I've been playing for over 35 years. I generaly play jazz/fusion and occasionally rock/hard rock.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $200.00
Submitted 12/05/2005 at 05:14pm by redmaster26

Ease of Use : 5
never seen a pedal this small w/ so many adjustments

Sound Quality : 5
I had the DP and just bought the OCD. I think the tone of the OCD is much better. Basically the Distortion Pro is made for the stage. I am just a hobbiest with my equipment set up in the basement, therefore I cannot crank the volume. To me the OCD sounds better at lower volume levels where I think the Distortion pro would shine at a live gig. The distortion is kick ass though.

Reliability : 10
tough as nails

Customer Support : 10
they have replied to every e-mail promptly

Overall Rating : 5
High quality pedal. If you play live and want to spend a lot of time tweaking a distorion pedal, this one is for you. There are definetely some great sounds in this pedal, although you can find some bad ones too.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $189
Submitted 12/01/2005 at 07:49am by Ravioli

Ease of Use : 7
While some make like the added control of the trim pots, I think they make it harder to get a good tone. I think there is such a thing as TOO much control in an effect pedal. There is such a range of available tones in this box that it's just as easy to get a very bad sound as it is to get a good sound. I don't want a stompbox to have the flexibility of a rack unit. If I want 10 different tones, I'll get ten different pedals. I like pedals with a great basic tone as a foundation that allow little tweaks to adjust the sound to fit my guitar and amp.

Sound Quality : 7
The Distortion Pro sounds alright...but that's it. I was expecting a much more refined tone. I know it's a distortion and not an overdrive, but it didn't retain any of the qualities of my guitar and amp.

I also thought there would be a lot more gain. I normally use overdrive pedals, but I play a lot of covers so every now and then I need a heavier tone, and I thought the Distortion Pro would fit the bill.

Reliability : No Opinion
The pedal looks solid but I've heard bad things about the trim pots falling apart...

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 6
I'm a tone NUT. I own about 70 pedals, from $50 Boss to $500 Way Huge and everything in between. I'm a firm believer in spending more to get more. But honestly, I just don't understand the hype about this pedal. I am NOT slamming Fulltone, but I have never played any of his pedals and thought "Oh my God, what a tone!" I was equally disappointed with the Fulldrive 2 and the Choralflange.

Because of the so-so tone, the lack of transparency, and the high price, this pedal just doesn't do it for me. For the same tone, get yourself a Boss SD-1 and save $130. Or for a better tone in the same price range get a Tone Bone, Barber, Maxon, etc.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: won
Submitted 10/24/2005 at 12:14pm by curtis
Email: cbobbydazzle<at>yahoo dot com

Ease of Use : 10
This is D.P.serial #1.I won this pedal from fulltone a few years ago.After a few years of owning this Im able to give a fair and balanced report.Its quite advanced for a distortion box especially if you are used to the usual 2 or 3 knob pedals.There are 6 KNOBS!.At first,.I wasn't prepared for the versitility this thing offers and mabie even a bit skeptical however, I was pretty impressed right off the bat with all the variations you can dial in from very dynamic picky mild kinda singing tone with a little sag to full on almost a brite silicon fuzzface type sound with almost all the picking attack and dynamics removed BUT without all the radio stations or the noise you get with other pedals.Its the only distortion pedal that offers all this controll.Versitility makes up for the fiddling time for sure.Ive updated the chip and its a little smoother than before but whatever...its not as crucial as I initially thought.I figued it out without picking up the manual....thats key for me.

Sound Quality : 10
My settup changes depending on the situation at hand but a few basics allways apply.A decent guitar thats confortable to play with non muddy pick ups.An all tube amp that reacts well to how I play at a non deafining level and a quality 2x12 or 4x12 cab(16ohm) with broken in v30's or broken in eminence 12 inch speakers.... an essential starting point for filling the requirments of"rock tone" as we know them.From what I can tell,The D.P. was not designed to warm up...say.. a clean clear sounding solid state amp like the Roland JC-120.You could certainly be into 80's Robert Fripp and use the D.P. and achieve those bright colder fuzz tones if thats your thing....BUT...The D.P. in my opinion was ment to add ample sustain and gain to a warmer tube amp thats"in the zone" or at stage level with a mabie hint of break up.I like to run this in front of another pedal at the same time for more over the top pink floyd"Time"type soloing.Works excellent.Very noise free.Could be stiff or cold into a cold amp.

Reliability : 10
A TANK.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never needed it

Overall Rating : 10
This pedal compliments my set up very well.I like etherial weird art rock. For long sustained almost ebow like soloing ala Steve Hacket, I dont need his exact pedal..I just need the gain without the hisssssss.It was free.Its very rugged and compact and very usable and tweekable.Doesnt get the choas blown up... super farty or phat edgy or hissy with a scooped mid like a big muff if thats what your into.Its way more precise and controlled with more mids.A little more polite.Do not expect it to behave like a cranked up amp!!!.There is no be all end all with pedals( and I own many).....You really need to play your guitar with your amp with a band at stage volume to find out what really works best.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $155 used
Submitted 08/26/2005 at 07:32am by Javi

Ease of Use : 8
Volumen y Distorsi?n + 4 controles para el tono+ 2 Trim internos...un poco complicado pero tambi?n por ello realmente vers?til .
El m?o es la versi?n del 2004, con el nuevo opamp. He podido probar la versi?n antig?a y comparar, y realmente merece la pena: cremoso y con cuerpo ser?a la definici?n

Sound Quality : 10
Gibson Les Paul Special + Fender Deluxe 112
Nivel de ruido m?nimo, incluso a alta ganancia.
El sonido es "enorme", con mucho cuerpo: nada que ver con otros pedales de transistores.
Muy vers?til, siempre en la onda del rock, blues rock...
Desde Hendrix a Zeppelin, Allman Brothers, Clapton , etc
Paleta de sonidos muy amplia, alcanzando la frontera del Fuzz.
Simplemente , uno de los mejores y m?s vers?tiles pedales de distorsi?n del mercado.

Reliability : 9
Solido como un tanque.
Lo he puesto a prueba en directo y responde sin problemas.
Parece innecesario tener un backup (aparte del dinero que supone ;-)

Customer Support : No Opinion
He consultado en una ocasi?n con Fulltone (supongo que no contestar?a el propio M Fuller, aunque firmaba como tal! :-)
acerca de los trim pot

Overall Rating : 10
Por el precio y teniendo en cuenta su versatilidad y la enorme calidad del sonido, se merece un 10. Comparando con cualquier otro pedal de distorsi?n que he tenido (Boss DS1, MXR Distortion +, Vox y un largo etc) se merece un 10 sin dudarlo: es ni m?s ni menos lo que buscaba dentro de la l?nea del rock, hard rock, blues.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $150
Submitted 08/04/2005 at 01:43pm by Jules
Email: jules<dot>helle at laposte<dot>net

Ease of Use : 6
4 tiny knobs are not easy to twiddle with, and feel flimsy to compared with the 2 volume and gain main knobs.

A lot of possibilities allows you to dial around and look for your sound, as the manual is kept to the minimum

All pots interact with each others, again many sound variations possible but it can take time to nail your disto.

Sound Quality : 9
I use a Peavey wolfgang std or a Mex 60's strat with Texas S, into a fender blues junior.
The unit is not particularly noisy. I cannot find any bad sound with it. Every sound will be very organic, creamy, beautiful.It is warm, but not agressive, cutting but not harsh.


This distortion is definitely more on the vintage, Fuzz-ish side of sounds (can actually create a brilliant genuine fuzz), and is not a hard rock or metal pedal.
It oozes quality and authenticity. Highly recommended

Reliability : 8
Tank-like. Heavy case, sturdy knobs, sockets, and battery compartment
Real trustworthy gear, better be nice with the smaller knobs, though

Customer Support : No Opinion
no experience

Overall Rating : 9
Great for Rock lead, rhythm. Classic sounds and sheer quality

Would buy it again, or check other fulltone gear.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $190.00
Submitted 04/12/2005 at 03:26pm by Machine
Email: jsh<at>fifthstone dot com

Ease of Use : 8
Lots of choices. Two large knobs cover volume and distortion. Four tiny knobs cover resonance (lows), voicing (presence), highs, and saturation (compression). Despite all the knobs, it was pretty easy to get good sounds out of the unit. I haven't even touched the manual yet. I will say that the little knobs are tough to get a hold of. Some earlier reviews say they sometimes "disintegrate", so I'm being careful not to squeeze them or anything.

Sound Quality : 8
Fender American Strat with Dimarzio stacked humbuckers in neck and middle, Seymour Duncan JB Jr. in the bridge; Epiphone Elite Les Paul (stock); Warmoth Tele, ash body ebondy board with SD vintage single coils...all through a Peavey Delta Blues with 15" speaker and Fender Blues Jr. I run this pedal into the clean channel just on the verge of some power amp drive.
The Distortion Pro is very quiet, though it can put out a huge amount of gain. I've not taken the volume past 10 o'clock. The sound I like best so far is the Les Paul bridge with the distortion at 10 o'clock and the volume at 10 o'clock, mini knobs at about 1 o'clock but the saturation at 9 o'clock. With this setting, the humbucker gives me a nice classic rock lead and rhythm sound. It also cleans up pretty well. The Strat sounds ok with it, but the humbuckers are better. With saturation relatively low, this box preserves your picking dynamics very well. I don't like an overly compressed sound (saturation clockwise), but if you're into that sort of thing this unit can deliver. That saturation knob is, in my opinion, the single most flexible pot on the Distortion Pro. It can dramatically change the feel and sound in a good way.
I would recommend this pedal to people looking for a good classic rock sound, especially with humbuckers (you know the sound). It's not an overdrive pedal. True bypass, which is essential.

Reliability : 10
Fulltones are solid. This is my fifth Fulltone pedal and none of them have given me anything but great tone. 5 year warranty.

Customer Support : No Opinion
One email answered, one ignored. No rating.

Overall Rating : 9
I've been playing for over 20 years, have owned various overdrive / fuzz / distortion effects, etc. I play mostly classic rock and blues, with some metal and pop thrown in.
Great pedal for getting various shades of classic rock, especially with humbuckers. I prefer my Fulldrive 2 for the Strat. The Distortion Pro sounds very much like a good tube amp with power section being pushed. Nice dynamics, great flexibility, great sound. I do wish the mini knobs were larger, but cant't reasonably ask for that in such a compact box. It's nice that these knobs exist at all, adding to the unit's flexibility. I would replace this unit if I had to.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $197
Submitted 04/01/2005 at 10:41pm by Mike

Ease of Use : 8
I found it fairly easy to get a good sound out of it, but it wasn't the sound "promised" by Fulltone, nor was it the sound i was looking for.

Sound Quality : 7
Playing a Suhr classic with single coils into a Fender Blues Jr at modertaely loud volumes. While very musical, this pedal didn't have near the gain i was looking for. Decent sustain, but where's the dirt? The only way i could get it close to what i wanted was by running my Fulldrive 2 into the front of it. The Fulldrive is the best overdrive pedal i have ever plyed, but i was looking for something to give that serious shred sound, and i could only get close with the Distortion Pro by combining it with the Fulldrive. I suppose there are those who would find this to be exactly what they want, but it just didn't cut it for me.
I will say that for what it does, it sounds excellent.

Reliability : 9
Fulltone stuff is built to withstand WWIII. I'v eno doubt that had i chosen to keep it, this pedal would've lasted a long time.

Customer Support : 7
My only dealing with him was one email, to which he responded to a couple days later. No complaints.

Overall Rating : 7
A nice piece of gear, just like all fulltone products, but not what i was looking for.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $200
Submitted 03/21/2005 at 08:33am by Tchello

Ease of Use : 3
You have to tweak very much to get a great sound of this unit. Four interactive controls that are very touch sensitive. The suggested settings on the manual don't work for me.

Sound Quality : 7
My setup is Tom Anderson Classic Swamp Ash, Valley Arts M Series, PRS Custom 24, Custom Made Strat with Rio Grande Pickups and Burns Bison Custom Shop.
Sounds good but not great, my Keeley DS 1 Ultra sounds much better. Definitive not a Allan Holdsworth sound. Good Sustain, can handle complex chords, not noisy, not good for scooped mids. Tone controls inetractive a real pain in the ass.


Reliability : 9
Built like a Sherman Tank, practically indestrutible, I can gig without a backup, althought little tiny controls seems fragile.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never have to deal with Mike.

Overall Rating : 6
I am a professional musician for over 23 years playing fusion, rock and pop music gigging 3 to 4 times a week. If it were stolen or lost I look for somewhere else since I like this pedal but not love it. I think this unit is overpriced for what it does. Good but not God.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $140.00 used
Submitted 03/15/2005 at 04:40pm by B. Spicer

Ease of Use : 10
Borrowed the DP and a Fulldrive from a buddy for a couple weeks and found both to be great pedals. Chose the Dp due to the versitility(sp?). This pedal has it all!

Sound Quality : 10
This pedal still amazes be after almost 3 months! Countless shades of drive to all out fuzz! Will kick the crap out of many fuzzfaces! as well as serve up great overdrive tones. I currently run a DP in place of my double TS-9 set-up with an original Dunlop cry. My main amp is a Kendrick 410 (Bassman replica) with 3 spring reverb and other custom goodies. With the DP It doesn't matter if I plug in a strat, 335 or Les paul, the pedal is very transparent and also works well for tough volume situations... Lively rooms, small stages,garages, basements ect.





Reliability : 10
Cant say just yet, but optimistic. Very quiet and well built.

Customer Support : No Opinion
cant say yet.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I have been playing over 25 years, I have owned countless vintage,reissue,& modern amps. You WILL NOT be able to realize the full mojo of any (especially custom) effect box unless you have a GOOD amp period! I read the reviews below and I can see why some users' experiences are bad.If you have a solid state or so called tube amp that consist of a pc board with tubes stuck to it, the DP wont cure it all (would probably help), but if the amp has no dynamics and bad voicing you are already headed down a muddy Mississippi road! Get a real amp and then try his effects and then you will realize the potential. I have tried other pedals by Fulltone and other boutique effect pedal builders. There is some really cool stuff out there. A lot more than there was even 10 years ago. Younger players are very fortunate. They just need a good amp to begin the journey.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US n/a used
Submitted 02/09/2005 at 11:27am by Roger
Email: parcellinw2aol dot com

Ease of Use : 10
very easy to get a great sound, I dunno what those negative reviews were talking about either unless they just don't know how to play.

I bought mine used with no manual

The unit has not been upgraded and I belive it was built in 2004

Sound Quality : 10
I especially like this effect with just a single coil strat, the pick up switch on 5 all the way up to the neck pup and vol on the guitar full.
I do not find it noisy

The effects always sound great if your using good equipment. You can't take a shitty amp & guitar & expect a miricle.
I generally use it with a fender amp.
I think the pedal is al;l good for a distortion pro.

Reliability : 9
Definatly built like a tank...

I always carry backups for everything I can...just Murphys law

Customer Support : 10
called once & they were very friendly & helpfull

Overall Rating : 10
I play blues & classic rock

I have been playing over 25 years

if lost or stolen I'd def look for another

I compaired it to all the major brands out on the marcket. This one won hands down

take your time with it & find out what it does & doesn't & use it to have fun


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 02/06/2005 at 10:07am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion
This is just a follow up to an earlier review - my original review was in Sept. 2003. I've had my pedal for about 1 1/2 years now and use it quite often for lots of gigs. It's actually on my "back up" pedal board which I use for outdoor gigs...my main pedal board never goes outside. Anyways - the Dist Pro works great for me - doesn't sound as good as my Tonebone Hot British distortion, but I still dig the vibe of the Dist Pro. I use it in various combinations with 2 overdrive pedals (Reverend Drivetrain II & Boss SD-1) as well as my Boss compressor.......and it really gets the job done. I mainly use the Drivetrain II for rythym work then kick on the Dist Pro for a really fat saturated lead tone......nice.

But I had to laugh when I read part of the review below:
"...one of the four little knobs has crumbled apart, it still works though."

Two of my Dist Pro's "little knobs" have also crumbled apart. What's the deal? Mine still works fine too.....but jeeeeeeez...for the money I paid for this pedal, that's not cool. For protective measures a wrapped small pieces of electrical tape around all 4 small knobs for fear of any future "crumblings". I take exceptionally good care of my gear and this pedal has always been secured on a pedal board which is transferred around inside a very heavily padded case. It didn't fall or anything.......just can't imagine how or why those knobs crumbled?



Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 01/25/2005 at 02:17pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 9
Pretty easy to use...if confused, then look at manual. Tones are above average at bedroom levels, but onstage (strat with a 66' Super Reverb, amp volume set on about 5)this pedal really sounds neato.

Sound Quality : 9
Although it sounds good at bedroom levels, you need to take it onstage to really apreciate the tones that the pedal is capable of. Although, for apartment jamming I found that I can get a great tone with the Distortion pro and my strat played through my little mid-1970's vibro-champ. To my ear, this pedal prefers single-coil pickups. I occasionally use this pedal with my Germino Masonette head which also sounds neat, but I prefer using it with the Super Reverb. The Germino gets a pretty great overdriven tone without any effects.

Reliability : 7
I have had it for two years and it has held up well, but one of the four little knobs has crumbled apart, it still works though.

Customer Support : 10
I have dealt with fulltone and he was very helpfull.

Overall Rating : 10
Good overdrive pedal, goes well with single coils, but that is only my opinion. Also, I prefer it's tone with mildly cranked single channel tube fender amps.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $150.00 used
Submitted 01/07/2005 at 03:35pm by George King, Colorado

Ease of Use : 7
This pedal takes some getting used to. It is not a "play in your bedroom" distortion device. Once you accept that, and work with it a real stage volume, then it gets interesting. The manual does what it intends to do, but again, the manual makes sense at stage volumes.

Sound Quality : 9
I use a Soldano SLO100 or a Dr. Z Maz 18 Jr, no reverb. Gibson 335 or a telecaster, it sounds great with both guitarsThe results are the same for both amps when turned up. The Soldano doesn't need any boost, but the pedal does sound great anyhow. My pedal is quiet at stage settings. It works well with both amps.

This is the most muscular booster pedal I've ever used. The tone is deep, tight, punchy, clear without harshness, and very strong. On my Dr. Z, it seems to add many watts to the little sucker, putting it into the 50 watt feel. This may be one of the all-around most powerful lead tones. And, it really does clean up to a rythm tone when the volume gets turned down.

The key is in the trim pots inside. I backed both pots down(CLOCKWISE = LESS) a quarter turn. This pedal is mighty indeed. Beware - if you want squarewave, clipped super crunch, this is not really it. However, if you want truly big-league professional solo tone for real worl stage volumes in a quality tube amp, this is a fine piece. I'll give it a 9 because I'm still getting into more of its textures and haven't stopped tweaking it.

Reliability : 10
It's a Fulltone. Reliability is not an issue unless you beat your gear. If you treat your gear with respect and simply give it a moderate stomp for on-off, it should last a very long time. Backup? Come on - I can use either amp's own overdrive qualities to finish any gig, but this pedal's reliabil;ity is not a factor in anything. If you break this, you are doing something excessive. Does anyone bring a backup steering wheel for their equipment truck? Just in case it breaks . . . ?

Customer Support : 9
I sent an old Fulltone 70s pedal in for service. I tried changing the electronics in it and fried the output signal totally. I spoke with Mike on the phone and told him what I did. He said he would upgrade the old pedal to newer specs. $39 bucks. He wasn't mean, just busy. The actual repair service was flawless. I got what I wanted on the first try. That could be considered customer service, right? No big deal.

Overall Rating : 9
I've played for 30 years and used a lot of gear. People say my tone is always very good. I play music that ranges from rock to metal to country. There are differences between live stage sound and studio sound, and this is a live pedal, I think. I probably wouldn't bother using this pedal for the lighter stuff, but when it's time to rock out and take a solo, this pedal is powerful and articulate. Remember - this is a professional, stage volume device, not a bedroom or studio crunch pedal. If you want simple crunch, dirt and hard edged clipping, there are better choices.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/25/2004 at 11:33pm by Adam
Email: DamageControlAJD at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 7
I recieved a 2004 model of this pedal, and from what I understand, it is more responsive with the volume knob than the older model in many ways, which I thought was cool. As for the controls, they're fairly straightforward, though slightly oddly labeled. Two of the controls are actually tweaked from inside the pedal through means of adjustable trimmer pots, which are vital to the pedal's tonal shaping. It takes a little work to get a good sound out of the pedal, but overall, it's pretty basic.

Sound Quality : 7
First, a disclaimer: I will try to be as objective as possible with this review, but this pedal was not what I thought it was going to be. I will be scoring it based on the accuracy of Mr. Fuller's description.

As for my set-up, I'm using:

Kramer Striker Custom FR-422CM with Seymour Duncan '59 Humbucker in the bridge -> Analogman modded BOSS SD-1 (TS-808 mod) -> Fulltone Fat Boost (godly pedal, by the way) -> Fulltone Distortion Pro -> Fender Hot Rod Deville 410, on clean channel

It's a relatively quiet pedal, but, here's my big problem. The pedal is nowhere near as sweet and buttery as Mike Fuller would have you imagine. I was expecting something in the ballpark of a cranked class A, handwired tube amp kind of vibe. Not necessarily of the same caliber as, say, an AC30, but something smooth like that. The only tone I was personally partial to was a kind of fuzzed out Plexi tone. It was cool for Cream stuff, but it's not really what I was looking for. I could get a pseudo-Page tone as well, but not convincing enough for the price tag. I decided to mess with the trimmer pots, and found my adjustments to be more agreeable with my humbucker-driven sound, but still not quite up to par. Don't get me wrong, it was a cool sound, but not nearly as cool as my SD-1/Fat Boost combo. The sound from the Distortion Pro was something I could only describe as buzzy and intrusive. That description may be a little harsh, but the sound was just too cold for my tastes. I wouldn't go so far as to put it on the same level as, say, a BOSS MT-2, or something equally as horrid, but I feel like it was not at all worth the hefty price tag. Final judgment: Decent pedal, less than decent price. I would give it a 6.75 if I could.

Reliability : No Opinion
I don't think I'll answer here, simply because I didn't keep it long enough to really test it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I've never had to deal with Mr. Fuller, but from what I've heard, that may be a good thing. I won't pass any judgments as I've never talked to him, but let's just say he has quite the reputation for being difficult at best.

Overall Rating : 6
I play in a band that is like a mix between Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, The Black Crowes, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Pink Floyd, Queen, and a little bit of harder stuff thrown in, like Guns N Roses, Alice In Chains, Motorhead, and the like, and I can honestly say that the Distortion Pro didn't really nail of the usable tones I was looking for. I'm 16, and I've been playing for 3 years, but I have a very picky taste for tone, and let's just say my amount of experience isn't representative of my playing. I've tried two other Fulltone pedals (Fat Boost and '69 Fuzz), and found much more success, and I've heard good things about his other ones, and I'm also led to believe that the Distortion Pro is the rotten apple, so to speak. If it were lost or stolen, I would most certainly not buy another one. In fact, I am going to the guitar shop tomorrow to exchange it for a Full Drive or Soul Bender. Overall, good pedal, but not great.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $165-used used
Submitted 12/17/2004 at 02:30pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 5
Hard to find the sweet spot-differs with twins and marshalls and boogies. not complicated but has only one sweet spot.

Sound Quality : 4
Not bad but not as good as I expected. If you want EJ, than buy a tonebone classic. Its not too bad though but not very versitile. A bit buzzy and thumpy. It just dosnt sing like my tone bone or my keeley tubescreemer. Not bad, but for fulltone-it sucks-and the price too.

Reliability : 8
fulltone stuff always stands up to abuse-except the older clydes.

Customer Support : 9
I know everyone thinks Mike fuller is a pompous, snobby-ass jerk! He is actually a nice guy and will talk to you in person patiently and helpfully. And He is a very busy guy!!

Overall Rating : 3
Not fulltone material-should be discontinued.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/21/2004 at 08:14pm by Adrian Allen

Ease of Use : 7
Pretty easy. I played this pedal once in a music store through a modded fender super reverb reissue. The mod was explained to me as such that it was modded to sound like an original super reverb.
I plan on getting this pedal or a MXR Distortion 2 when I can afford it. (I'm po') The pedal has more controls than your average pedal but this makes it more diverse. I did not have time to mess with the internal trimpots as I only played on it for an hour or so. I had no problem adjusting the pedal.

Sound Quality : 9
I was using a G&L custom shop strat type guitar with single coil size blade buckers and George L's cable into a Fender as described above.
It sounded great! I was impressed by the amp like sound that this pedal produced. Most pedals seem to sit on top of an amps clean channel and unless combined with another gain stage, say another pedal or an overdriven amp, sound unusable and fake. Not this one.
It had wonderful sustain and articulation. I could slide up to a note and it would pick it up and sustain it. I played awhile without picking and felt like Joe Satch! Not really (the Joe part), but it was cool. I could just slide and slide! The sound was definitely what I would call brown. I mean this maybe not like others do because I know that everyone calls EVH's sound brown but it always seemed red to me. (maybe his guitars?)
But it actually seemed brown and was not at all harsh. It was a dry sound and I don't mean dry as in dry signal but dry as in it didn't seem liquid. I know that that may be seen as a negative but I didn't think so. Perhaps it was woody. It integrated with the amp very well and had room to breath unlike the Maxon D&S II I tried that same day which sounded like dog doo. Come to think of it though the maxon seemed to have an ampish quality to it as well which makes me wonder if perhaps the amp that I was using just reacted to pedals better than what I have. I am using a 5150 head and have never been able to get a good tone out of an overdrive or distortion pedal out of the clean channel. I am now using a Sansamp GT2 which works fantastically combined with my dirty channel but sounds fake through the clean. On top of the fakeness there are terrible ear shattering highs that aren't even part of the tone. Anyway this is about the Distortion Pro. Great Pedal!

Reliability : No Opinion
???????? Would guess that it is reliable. It did have a shifty look on its face though......

Customer Support : No Opinion
?????????

Overall Rating : 9
I would say that this pedal could match just about any style of music that uses distortion. What about nu- metal scooped sounds you say?
Sure if you reaaly need more distortion and less mids combine it with a little amp distortion or another pedal and an EQ and there is no reason why you couldn't, unless you can't play, but isn't that the case nowadays. Of course there are many exceptions. I have been playing for 15 yrs I play anything I can get my hands, mind and heart around. I started with shred and metal went to funk then classic rock and blues to folk and fusion and am now working on jazz (gotta revisit the blues). Don't own it so can't say about whether I would replace it if it was stolen. I love the sound hate the price.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US around $200
Submitted 11/02/2004 at 04:46pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 5
I was intially very disappointed with this pedal. I bought the DP-1 because my Full-Drive 2 gave me instant gratification (and, to this day, is my favorite pedal). However, the DP-1 required a great deal of tweaking and even then I was only marginally satisfied.
I felt the control knobs were labelled sort of arbitrarily. "Resonance" "Voicing" "Highs" and "Saturation" are terms I understand yet in the context of this pedal their relationships baffled me. So I put it away. I went through countless other distortion and fuzz pedals, looking for the "holy grail" distortion to complement my overdrive sound.
When I came back to the DP-1, I decided to give it one more try. Still no luck. And then, I reread the manual and realized I had missed the obvious: INTERNAL TRIMMER ADJUSTMENT.
I followed the instructions, reducing the gain for trimmer #1, and the results were very gratifying. The control knobs functioned perfectly and logically.

Sound Quality : 10
I play hollowbody guitars out of Fenderish amps. I bought this pedal for a solid Marshall type distortion to complement my overdrive sound. After I made the internal trimmer adjustment, the pedal no longer fought my humbucker pick-ups. My low-end didn't disappear. I got that thick, high-gain sound I was looking for.
I've read many of the reviews for the DP-1 and I believe many (if not all) of the negative reviewers would benefit from tweaking the internal trimmer#1. My initial response to the pedal was just like their's, but I'm so glad I held onto it.

Reliability : 10
I've never had a problem with any Fulltone products.

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/A

Overall Rating : 10
I play Pop/Rock music. No cover band stuff. Just, guitar-driven 3 minute pop songs. I've been playing for a long time. If this pedal were lost or stolen I would immediately get another one.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $199
Submitted 11/01/2004 at 08:43am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 9
Mine is a 2004 model and has the usual features: volume distortion plus 4 small pots and two internal trimmers (very useful!). A lot of control is therefore possible at the expense of needing time to fiddle (but that's all part of the fun!)

Sound Quality : 9
I had an early version of the DP-1 which I didn't really get on with. I have to say my opinion is now completely revised with the new version. With my setup of Tom Anderson/Music Man guitars through a Cornford Hellcat combo, it is rich and smooth with lovely overtones. It nails a good range of distortion sounds but the thing I really like is the way it interacts with the amp and your guitar's controls. The best distortion pedal I've tried for my setup (and that is the crucial point - it may not be the right one for your setup and needs).

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank and well designed. No backup required.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I've never needed to contact Fulltone for anything (I also own a Clyde deluxe wah and a custom shop Dejavibe) so I can't comment.

Overall Rating : 10
I play everything from bluegrass to Steve Vai via the blues, rockabilly and classic rock. This pedal suits my setup and style perfectly and for that extra push, it is superb. As someone else on the forum has said, "Good things aren't cheap and cheap things aren't good". Discuss.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $200
Submitted 09/15/2004 at 08:09am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
Well, it does have a lot of knobs - but I stil found it easy. Really, I have never seen a difficult pedal. How hard can it be.

Sound Quality : 5
OK. That's what I think of this pedal - good, but not god. I've owned this pedal for over a year, and coupled with my Ful Drive II (best pedal I've ever played!) it has been usefull, if not inspiring. I play in an inde rock emo band, but don't really like distortion. I like the mild chunky sounds between distortion and overdrive.
This pedal, on the other hand, ounds very smooth and reentlesly "classic rocky." This is exactly what the ads say, and obviously what Mike Fuller intended. For me it has outworn its usefullness. Ths became very apparent the other day when I tried out a Maxon D&S and was treated to much more of what I've always wanted in a distortion device. Although the Distortion Pro has many knobs it never, for me, produced a particularly great sound. Al that tweaking produced only one ok sound after another. In some ways the pedal is versatile - but in other ways it is hopelessly limited.

Reliability : 10
Rock solid!

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 5
Ok, but not great sound. One could get any number of simpler cheaper pedals, and probably be happier with the sound. If you like cheesy "classic rock" smoothness this pedal could be for you.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 08/12/2004 at 12:14am by Blues Man

Ease of Use : 10
This pedal is easy to use, but I have a certain approach picked up from an earlier reviewer here. I turn the Saturation and Highs controls all the way to the left and basically leave them there. Resonance I leave at 12 o'clock, and Voicing at 1 o'clock.

Volume I leave at 10 o'clock and Distortion is 8 o'clock, just a little bit over "all the way to the left".

Using the above settings, you will find a nice smooth boost, my friends.

Sound Quality : 10
You must have a good amplifier sound to begin with, before even thinking about boosting it. The Distortion Pro is not a cure-all that will take a sterile solid-state amp and turn it into a vintage Marshall Plexi. I used an ENGL Screamer 50 head and the results are just fine. I highly recommend using speakers with hempcones instead of standard speakers in your cabinets.

In my case, using the DP instead of the ENGL Screamer 50's volume boost and channel switching definitely seemed to be smoother. "Smooth" is the watchword here. Smooth instead of fuzzy, smooth instead of harsh, smooth instead of scratchy. That's where the DP shines.

Compared to the Fulltone Fulldrive 2, the DP will give you more of that .. you guessed it ... smooth sound.

Reliability : No Opinion
I bought a used 2002 version in May 2004. So far it has worked just fine. Not sure about long term reliability ...

Customer Support : 1
I e-mailed Mike Fuller about upgrading my 2002 DP to more recent specifications. Instead of addressing my simple request, he asked some rather lame questions about what was wrong with my DP. I wrote back, saying I wasn't talking about a problem, just asking about upgrading the DP from 2002 to more modern specs. He wrote back, saying that "I wasn't hearing him" and again reacted as if I were asking about a repair problem instead of an upgrade.

Trying to restrain myself a little bit, I wrote back, semi-apologizing (even though I wondered why I should semi-apologize, considering the situation) and I explained that the upgrade of the DP from 2002 to the more modern specs was what I was referring to, citing examples from the web.

He ignored that e-mail. So, sorry guys, even though the DP is a great pedal, I think Mike Fuller's customer service leaves a lot to be desired. Too bad.

I'll probably try once again to contact Fulltone about upgrading my DP from 2002 to modern specs, maybe by phone, since I live in L.A. If I get a positive, no BS response, then I'll update this review in the future.

Come on, Mike Fuller, stop being a prima donna and remember what the words "upgrading the Distortion Pro" mean. It's the "op-amp" upgrade, remember?

Overall Rating : 8
Great pedal, big increase in tonal quality, highly recommended.

But hey, why is Mike Fuller lost in space? It's time for Mike Fuller to climb off that hobby horse and join the rest of us.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: 100 (pounds)
Submitted 08/04/2004 at 04:32pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
Just turn the knobs and you see what this can do.Simple.

Sound Quality : No Opinion
Quite good as a fuzz.Wasn't really what I was looking for, I'm after more of a broken sound that can go from soft to powerful.It's not a bad sound if the distortion level is set to zero but any more it gets way too fuzzy and you lose string clarity for picking.very quiet pedal and nice compression.I play through a Roland JC-120 which is quite a bright amp.Maybe the pedal will react better to a tube amp.I've got to get my Rivera TBR 1 working, been sitting there tubeless for ages ! I wanted more 'overdrive' really.Gonna sell it and try something else, maybe the Fulltone Bassdrive for low end handling.The quietness,true bypass encourages me to try another fulltone pedal to see what they are all about. My set up is Fender Jazzmaster '63 Teese RMC-3 Wah/Boss GE-7 equalizer/Fulltone DP1/Boss DD-3 Delay/TL Audio 5051 Compressor/Eventide DSP-4000 Effects processor/Roland JC-120 with chorus half way.Gonna ditch the Jc 120 for a tube amp.Simms-Watts or Rivera.Daisy chained with Mesa Boogie Powerhouse bass cab.EV speakers.

Reliability : 10
Very solid and well built.Should last a lifetime if not more !

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I play Verve/Cocteau Twins type stuff.Lots of Reverb/Chorus/delay need a powerful distotion that doesn't get lost in the effects.This is a good pedal for a mild fuzz but not very versatile.I was dissapointed.I want noise and power but with string clarity.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $215
Submitted 07/24/2004 at 11:35pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 1
What a dud! i could not get a good sound out of it for the life of me. GOOD FUZZ FACE SOUND!

Sound Quality : 2
for the price i payed i expected more. Im using it through a vibro-king and a super reverb usaly i use 2 TS808s and a klon Centaur for overdrive a Captin Coconut 2 and a RCM1 wah with a Fender 1960 custom shop master build Stratocaster with a big neck and 11-50 gadge strings. and an Gibson ES-335. the Distortion pro sounds like a fuzz face and nothing more i was hopeing to get a smoothe eric Johnson like tone but to my disopointment it sounded more flat than a Boss overdrive. maby through a marshall plexi id have more luck.Oh well. which way to EBAY!

Reliability : No Opinion
does'nt matter

Customer Support : No Opinion
they should be sued for fraud for saying "it's not a FUZZ"

Overall Rating : 2
Ive been playing Rock with a bluezy edge,Fusion,Jazz. but now im in a rock band and i need a overdrive a little harder ill have to keep looking. ive been playing for 8 years


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: 170 (euro ) used
Submitted 07/09/2004 at 05:35am by Bam

Ease of Use : 9
Yes, I would like to truthfully state that it?s easy to use.

Sound Quality : 7
But that?s not the most important thing about this pedal. I would like to vent my own subjective ill informed criticism on this pedal. Up front; Yes, I might be considered as an amateur but I can?t help that and I?ve got a pocket full of money to spent so I?ll state my opinion. I?d like to spent my money on something I can appreciate. I hope that everybody can respect that. If you can?t, I?m really really sorry.
Anyway J, I was looking for a professional distortion pedal. Not one of those crappy, no bass, super clipping until your sick with it, mass production pedals. But something with nice attributes like true bypass, overall tone and tone control, pick response, little bit of tube feel and so forth. However, when I searched the net for the usual quality producers I noticed they seem to concentrate on overdrive and fuzz pedals.

Until I found the Fulltone Distortion Pro! Of course, the brand name sounds reassuring, it?s called Distortion Pro (remember what I was looking for), reviews are raving and it?s got a price tag that can compete with the best pedals out there.
I went ahead and bought one without hearing it (yes I know, that?s risky). Sadly, I was disappointed with the pedal. I?ll state right away that is indeed a quality pedal. It?s noiseless, has got real nice controls, there?s bass response and I imaging it really resembles a ?plexi on 10?. But it has just a small amount of clipping. I really don?t want is to sound like a Boss MT-2 (I?d rather not), but it?s more a high gain kind of sound then that there?s a lot off distortion there. When I thought of that (the high gain part), I remembered what I read on the Fulltone site; ?The greatest hi-gain sounds you can imagine, from Brian May to Boston, Holdsworth to EJ in a little metal box?.

My conclusion is that this still is an OVERDRIVE rather than a distortion pedal. I like overdrive but I wanted just plain clipping in levels you can?t achieve with the kind of amp I use.

So, with decreasing hope on the distortion pedal of my dreams I bought a Keeley DS-1 SEM. Now that?s really nice as well! Of course, it doesn?t have true bypass (since it?s a Boss pedal to start with) but it is still very quiet and I haven?t noticed any loss in signal or leaking of the effect when it?s off. It resembles the character of the DP in it?s tubelike sound but offers a lot more clipping. It?s got bass response as well.
It?s also a lot cheaper. I gather that that is something the pro doesn?t complain about because ?if you want quality, you?ll pay for it? but I really wonder about why some of the boutique pedals cost almost as much as a quality amp. Furthermore, I don?t think that just accepting high prices will help anyone (except the producer).



Reliability : No Opinion
Probably yes, but I can?t judge that on my own experience. Seems to be manufactured very well.

Customer Support : 7
I?m a little bit worried about the reputation of Fulltone. It seems you can get mails if you don?t act like a professional and ask stupid questions. (I would not like to get kicked out of the Fulltone family at just the start of my pedal career.) But hey, that?s hearsay and I wouldn?t hold that against anyone. That?s just not fair.


Overall Rating : 7
I play rock. Use a Fender Strat+ with an Orange AD15, also fuzzfoot, wah, DS-1 SEM, MEK TB-2 overdrive (made by hand in Germany and a lot cheaper than most other boutique pedals), CE-2, RV-3.
The DP didn?t do it for me. Maybe it?s the pedal for you. Just consider the fact that this pedal doesn?t produce a whole lot of clipping. It simulates the kind of clipping professionals the likes of Jimmy Page produced by cranking their high gain amp, which in itself is distortion but is a whole other ballgame than the possibilities of distortion nowadays. I don?t know but for some reason I just like some amount of clipping in the signal and then into a tube amp after which there probably is another stage of (natural tube-) distortion and compression as well. But hey, I?m an amateur.

Anyway, if somebody wants to correct me on things described above, please feel free to mail me. Greetings, Bam


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: ca 1900nok (about 200$)
Submitted 07/05/2004 at 09:42am by Roe

Ease of Use : 9
Be ware: hi end means higher than 5k, more like 7 or 8k. The bass controll is deep bass. the saturation controll is great - you can adjust the compression and the odd harmonics. I would have liked a prescence knob as well.

Sound Quality : 10
Especiallly great with strats. works fine with a gretsch. Can need a little fine tuning to a avoid a muddy bass with a gibson (LP or 335).
It works great with marshalls, a Koch, a Alessandro/Working Dog, but a Rivera almost collaped - it diden't seem to have enough headroom.
The best thing about it is how dynamic it is. From semi-clean to distortion just with your pick attack or the volume knob on the guitar.
It's more quiet, more dynamic, more muscular and better sounding than a Tonebone Classic [sic].

Reliability : 10
Fulltone is the best.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
If it were stolen, I'd by a new one.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $197
Submitted 06/22/2004 at 01:31pm by Charlie Lanham
Email: clanhamnc<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 7
For ease of use I give this pedal a 7. Simply put it is not difficult to get a good sound out it, but it does take some time tweaking to acheive the desired tone. In other words I wouldn't whip it out of the box and plug it up for the first time at the gig. On the other hand, after some knob twiddling, I had acheived the desired result within an hour or so and haven't hardly touched a knob since. The only thing I do turn a little is the volume and distortion knobs, to fill up the room or vice versa. The fulltone manual describes the controls very well, but even so, the resonance (bass), voicing (mids), and highs (duh...), are far more interactive than can be adequately put in writing. Also the knobs, for the most part, have a detent at the midway position, which I suspect might help guide you on a dark stage. But seeing as how I don't mess with anything thing but the big knobs I don't really have that problem. Moving forward, mine is the upgraded model with the new chip, which really must be a godsend, because I have yet to have an abnormal noise issue. Basically the only thing I knock points off is for the tediousness of the first time dialing in your tone. After that it's pretty self explanatory.

Sound Quality : 8
I play a Fender American Standard Strat, all stock, through a Dr. Z Maz 18 Jr NR, and a Z-best 2x12 cab. First of all, and this is the most important thing about any pedal, if your guitar and amp combination doesn't sound good, there's no effect on earth that can change it. That being said, I really dig this pedal because it doesn't seem to alter my original tone too much. Don't get me wrong it really delivers on the distortion, but it sounds more like another channel on my amplifier than a pedal. One thing I will say is that it has far more bass response than your typical manufactured type distortion box. I thought this would be a problem as I demoed the pedal in my house, but at the club it really seemed to give the guitar some extra balls. As far as I can tell the pedal is dead quiet. I find that most noise can be attributed to either the shitty electrical wiring in the bar or far more likely, something such as a neon light running on the same circuit. Now for the big question... tone? My particular amp is a single channel model with a class A ciruit. It covers vintage fender to voxy type tones very well. With the DP-1 I can have my fender-esue clean tone and Marshall thick distortion. Keep in mind I'm not saying it sounds like a Marshall amp, but it really is that BIG sounding. Here is one place that I've encountered a problem, it that's really the right word for it. This pedal has an incredible amount of volume. I've found that if the situation doesn't allow me turn the pedal up to around the 12:00 position, then I might have to give it a little extra distortion to get the sustain I want. But what can you do? Hands down the best all around sounding distortion pedal I've ever played. Also cleans up very well with the guitar's volume control.

Reliability : 10
Short and sweet for this category. I would and do use it without a backup every time I play. No doubt about it. I looked inside this thing the first day I got it. Pure genius. Plus the casing is made of Sherman Tank steel or something like that. You could probably run over it with a car and just break the knobs. I know it sounds crazy, but for a box this small to be made of such a thick grade of steel, I can't imagine the amount a force it would take to actually make the pedal collapse upon itself.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I wouldn't know, never had to talk to them.

Overall Rating : 9
I play rock and blues. AC/DC, SRV, Led Zeppelin, Guns N Roses, Allman Bros, Cry of Love, Hendrix and such are what you'll find in my CD collection. I've been playing for approximately 9 years minus a couple that I can't really remember, but I still tinkered around some even then. I love the reliability and pure tone of a single channel amp such as my Z. With my Fulltone DP-1, I can broaden the range of sounds available to me without screwing around with my amp setup. For this it is invaluable. I have tried dozens of other distortion style effects including but not limited to the boss line-up, ibanez, some digital multi-effects devices (dod, digitech), and a mesa boogie v-twin, as well as various channel swtiching amps. The Fulltone beats them all. However, I still believe that good tone is primarily built on a strong foundation, such as a quality amp and guitar. If your rig doesn't sound right to begin with, the DP-1 will do you no good.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $170
Submitted 06/21/2004 at 07:31am by nw

Ease of Use : 10
Simplistic in its layout, this pedal is very easy to manipulate and use. Manual is very useful illustrating how to taper some innards of the pedal (and how to reset them).

Sound Quality : 10
This is a very musical and muscular pedal. Used with my Budda Stringmaster head (Budda's take on the ol' charged-up Fender - Dumble-esque design), it accentuated the amp's natural harmonics and feel - but with 10x gain. It gives a very natural amp like distortion (iMO), it is very expressive, and it brings out your guitar and amp's natural characteristics (which i like). Through my rig, this pedal can also give you sounds ranging from soft Plexi-esque gain to Black Sabbath-esque tapped out Laney distortion. I prefer to operate it in a medium gain mode, which gives you bluesey shaded of grit and overtones (Knopfler esque). This is also the quietest distortion pedal I have ever ever ever ever heard - with the drive maxed out, it is still dead silent (!!). It compresses the sound slightly is a very musical way - evening out the attacks and accentuates legato techniques.

Reliability : 10
I haven't managed to break a distortion pedal before... delay pedals yes, but not distortion... don't know why... Don't think this pedal will break the trend...

Customer Support : No Opinion
haven't had to contact them yet.

Overall Rating : 10
If I had to pick two words to summarize this pedal it would be "musical" and "quality". Very few pedals are capable to retaining your amp and gitar's natural characteristics while giving it this much gain. It's well worth the price of admission.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $215?
Submitted 05/02/2004 at 11:00pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 6
As mentioned, it is a very versatile pedal... small changes in the settings produce a wide variety of sounds... perhaps that isn't such a good idea, after all, although it sounded like a great concept. After owning this pedal for 6 months, I haven't found a use for it, as it doesn't give me a tone that I really connect with. I am developing a taste for simpler pedals with stronger character. Instructions are adequate, describing a few basic settings to start you off.

Sound Quality : 7
Again, I agree with most other users in appreciating this pedal's versatility. However, it has an underlying, if slight, buzz that is difficult to dial out without becoming muddy. I have played this through 3 different strats ( 2 fat strats, one with Texas specials and a Strat Plus with Kinmans) as well as a dot 335, '73 LP Custom and a '52 Tele RI. I play through either a VHT ST-50 with 2x12 cab or an Allen Old Flame with a single 12" EV SRO... numerous pedals before and after. I'm sorry, it 's an okay pedal, but I'm putting it on eBay. It never sounded smooth without some major tweaking of both the pedal and the amps, leaving me with the challenge of re-setting my amps to bring out the best sound in my other pedals, all of which express their best sounds with pretty much the same universal setting on the clean channel of both amps. For tone references, I look mostly to Eric Johnson, Allan Holdsworth, Mike Landau and Scott Henderson. ( at least for what I wanted this pedal for.) Again, there just seems to be a high end buzz or rasp that I can't dial out and can't ignore. Probably sounds great to someone else, but not to me.

Reliability : 10
All of Fulltone's stuff has a good reputation. I am keeping my Octafuzz and am picking up the Fulltone Uni-vibe clone (product name?) although I did return the FullDrive II... same issue, but a less versatile and more mid-rangey pedal than the DP.

Customer Support : 6
My brief experience has been a non-response to one email with a question about control settings. Doesn't seem to get good marks for bedside manner, but they probably get a lot of dumb requests. It's hard to get any work done, if you have to answer questions all day. I give them the benefit of the doubt and rate my one non-encounter a 6.

Overall Rating : 7
Not much more to say. Like most high end pedals, it must be someone's cup of tea. I'm selling mine and have a Banzai Fireball II on order. I also sent back a Barber pedal (can't recall which one, now, but a popular one) that seemed similar in it's drawbacks and tone, but not as nice as the Fulltones for construction.Right now, I'm using a combination of an old Marshall ShredMaster and an Analogman Silver Mod TS-9. Between the two of these and my amps, I get most of the tone I'm looking for. I have been playing for 33 years, play part-time right now in a funk/blues/fusion band. Love all kinds of jazz, blues, fusion, some classic rock and shred, some country. Not really into grunge, metal or alt rock, but try to appreciate it, anyway. I know that many people love everything made by Fulltone and Barber, and you really should live with a pedal for a week or two at least, to see where it fits in. This one just didn't quite do it for me and I realized lately that it's just taking up space on my pedal board. My ears tell me it's time for something else.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $220
Submitted 04/25/2004 at 08:23pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
Several controls (volume, distortion, saturation, lows, mid, highs) which interact with each other to produce a wide range of usuable sounds, unlike other pedals I've used. Of course, it takes a little exploration to find the sounds that you need, but it's well worth the effort.

Sound Quality : 10
Wow. I've been trying to get my Telecaster/Fender Twin setup to give me a Les Paul/Marshall sound in addition to the trademark Fender clean sound. I've tried several distortion/overdrive pedals (Tube Screamers, Maxon SD-9, Boss Distortions, to name a few) and several compressors (Keely, Carl Martin, etc.) to go with my drive channel, but I hadn't found the sound. A few months ago I replaced the stock speakers in my Twin with Celestion G12H's, and that helped. But the Distortion Pro is the ticket. It gives a wide range of sounds, from near-fuzzy to thick-mid power-tube overdrive. There's very good string definition, and it reacts well with the different channels on the Twin to produce several distinct types of distortion. It's like my 3-channel amp has added three more channels. Cleans up well when you back off the volume or play more softly. Sounds better than I had imagined. By far the best distortion pedal I've ever played. I also like it better even than my Clyde Deluxe Wah (sounds very good) and my Choralflange (which may someday give me the sounds I'm looking for, but I haven't found them yet). I know it sounds stupid to say that my Tele and Twin sound like a Les Paul through an old Marshall, and I'm sure the purists would beg to differ, but the Distortion Pro gives me that sound - and many others that I didn't know I was looking for but am glad I found.

Reliability : 9
I've had it for only a few weeks, so I can only speculate, but it seems well made.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I have 3 Fulltone pedals, and have had no problems with any of them, so I have not had any dealings with the company other than the purchases.

Overall Rating : 10
I've bought lots of musical equipment over the past 27 years, and in most cases the satisfaction curve for each new item purchased drops off shortly after the first use. Not this pedal. I like it more each time I play it. I don't know how this pedal would work with other guitar/amp combinations, but for mine, it is perfect. Now I can get the sounds I want. Eureka.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: trade
Submitted 04/17/2004 at 08:04pm by Tim C.
Email: srvguitarman30<at>yahoo dot com

Ease of Use : 8
Very awesome pedal, very tweakable, but you must take time with your guitar and amp to find what works with what you have. Well worth the effort. Minor adjustment are the key to good tone.

Sound Quality : 10
Very musical pedal. Actually and extention of the amp. Very little noise at high gain settings, cleans up real well with guitars volume knob. I use it with and SRV strat and a HW-1 strat with Van Zandt pickups. Sounds like I am playing through a marshall half stack. I bought this pedal after hearing a guy playing a les paul into an orange half stack. Thats all it took for me i was sold.

Reliability : 10
I have had this pedal for 2 years now. Absolutly no problems with the pedal. Not one. I would and do gig with out a back up. No need for one.

Customer Support : 10
I have an older model and they have since upgraded the op-amp. So I e-mailed Mike Fuller about what it would cost to have it upgraded. He e-mailed me back within 24 hours and said just the cost of shipping. That's what I call service

Overall Rating : 10
I play in a conteporary praise and worship band and have to cover blues, rock, vintage rock and modern sounds. This pedal does it very well, though I am partial to the brown sound with small tweaks here and there. Buying this pedal kept me from having to by a marshall half stack. I just use my Fender blues deluxe and it rocks the house.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: Trade used
Submitted 04/13/2004 at 10:54am by Brian Kahanek
Email: sidewindermusic<at>prodigy dot net

Ease of Use : 8
Well you have many options here. This pedal really is the swiss army knife of Distortion Boxes. There are two internal trimmers that affect the tone along with four EQ controls on the face. All of them are very active. If you just want to stomp and go - you probably want something else. If you want to tailor you Drive then by all means this is a great pedal.

Sound Quality : 9
I own just about everything Mike makes and this a keeper just like all the rest. With my Vibrolux reverb and Les Paul it just sounds beautiful - Smooth buttery tones. With my JTM 45 just as nice but different. Like I said above you really can get a huge range of tone with this thing. If I were to have one Drive box this or the FD2 would be topping the list.

Reliability : 10
Built like a Tiger Tank.

Customer Support : 10
I sent my 2002 DP1 to Mike for an upgrade to the 03 spec. Got the pedal back in less than a week. (I am LA based as well.) Spoke with Mike on the phone regarding my 70's pedal problem. He set me up on both accounts. If you have legitimate business to contduct with Mike he will bend over backward to help. If you just want to shoot the shit - call a drinking buddy.
Fulltone across the board is top notch.

Overall Rating : 10
I am a professional Session Guitarist and Audio Engineer in LA. I really only buy the best my Ear can find. I don't buy the cheap stuff anymore. I want to get it a forget about it. If your Distortion / drive pedal is playing you instead of you playing it. Then this will slove your ills. A great Pedal!


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $230?
Submitted 04/10/2004 at 07:46pm by MarcoB

Ease of Use : 7
I've owned this unit for about 3-1/2 months and I can tell you that the Distortion Pro is an intelligently designed pedal that I believe could be tweaked to achieve great to awesome results with virtually any guitar/amp/effects-chain combination. The price to be paid for this versatility, however, is that you need to play with the knobs for a while to get your tones down. (Or maybe I?m just slow?? Or very picky??)

Sound Quality : 10
I first heard this pedal at my local Guitar Center. I asked the gal at the counter what was the best distortion pedal in the house. She pointed at the little red pedal with the big sticker price and I though, "Yeah, that's your favorite." (You know, sales commission). I had to ask her at that point if she played guitar. No. She's a singer, but the guitar player in her band uses a DPro.

She set me up with an American Strat through the Distortion Pro through a Hot Rod Deluxe. I crank up the amp, switch on the bridge pickup and nearly freak out when I hear the sounds I'm getting with this thing!

I then asked to try Fulltone's Fulldrive 2. To make the story short, I walk out with both pedals. When I get home I play with a few of my guitars and amps and just have a wonderful time.

I am not a wealthy man, but when I heard these pedals, I knew I was very shortly going to put all my other distortion/overdrive pedals up on eBay.

Reliability : 10
Built strong to last long.

Customer Support : 9
After I'd had my pedals for a short while (but before I started to take them out to play) I noticed a hairline crack in one of the knobs on my Fulldrive 2. I e-mailed Mr. Fuller, telling him that I didn't know whether the crack was there when I bought it or if my wife or somebody had stepped on the pedal. Withing a few days I had a replacement knob (and a spare!) delivered to my door (no charge). I thought that was cool.

Later, I noticed a noise in my DPro and I e-mailed Mr. Fuller. He wanted me to be VERY sure the problem was his pedal before I sent it back to him. My initial reaction was that he was rather short with me. On a second reading of his e-mail, however, I decided that he was damned sure of his product and had so few bona fide problems that he felt it his place to demand that I check out the problem thoroughly before sending the pedal back.

The problem turned out to be no big deal, and I fixed it myself by moving a couple of wires (had someone at Guitar Center opened this pedal up and played around in there??).

Overall Rating : 10
This pedal has its niche. It doesn't do everything, but what it does do, it does very, very well. It really does allow subtle playing nuances to come through at most settings. Just tonight I hooked it up to my Twin Reverb for the first time. I plugged my SG into my Carl Martin compressor --> Distortion Pro --> H2O echo. Sheesh! I couldn't believe the sounds coming from that old amp!!! Got some really nice Third Door down tones from that antique relic (who'd a thunk?). My son soon stole the guitar away from me and played for a good while, smiling all the time! I also tonight came to understand this so called ?woman tone? I?ve been hearing about. And I thought Twin Reverbs were for ?Clean? playing!


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $197
Submitted 04/09/2004 at 07:20pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 9
Very easy to use. Not difficult. Read the manual to understand the dials, and its like dialing a telephone number.

Sound Quality : 10
This is where I'll get more specific. When I bought the pedal, I originally was going to buy a Fulldrive 2 because I own several distortion pedals that I was just not satisfied with: Boss DS-1, Danelectro, Ibanez Tube Screamer, etc. All the pedals I just mentioned are OK, but something was missing (maybe some serious modifications). Getting back to were I was going earlier- I was in Nashville a fews weeks ago, and I noticed all the players had either Sparkle Drives or Fulldrive 2's in use. Awesone clarity and musicality in the sounds produced. Right up my ally. Keep in mind that I was wanting to find a more organic, smooth less metallic sound. More of a classic rock/blues sound. I took all of my guitars: stock Les Paul Standard, American Tele with a 59 in the bridge, and an American Texas special. I took every pedal (Maxon 808, Maxon OD -9, Fulldrive 2, and the Distortion Pro) in the music shop in a backroom and tweeked away. Also, I used the same model of amp that I play - Fender Hot Rod Deville. I was going to buy the Fulldrive (Awesome Pedal!), but the Distortion Pro was more geared to my style of playing Classic Rock to Modern Rock. Very versitile, very natural distortion. Not too over the top. Does the "brown sound" very well. Very quiet!! Also cleans up well to give a very good blues tone. What I liked the most about the pedal was how it interacts with the volume knob. Can have a highly distorted sound, but by turing the volume down, can produce very clear lightly distorted sounds. Must note that the pedal also sounds awesome through Mesa Nomad, and a Marshall JCM 2000. Expensive pedal, but if your in to natural sounding distortion, this pedal is a keeper.

Reliability : No Opinion
No problems yet.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
You should experiement with it before you buy it - always a good suggestion before an equipment purchase. You will not be disappointed. It will speak for itself.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: $391 (CAN, tax included)
Submitted 04/08/2004 at 10:39pm by Justin Bunn
Email: hurricanechurchill at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 8
I have the newer 2003 model which apparently sounds much better than the first Distortion Pros produced. Takes some time to get your sound coming out of it but it just takes patience and a good ear. With 6 knobs and 2 internal trimmer knobs that all seem to interact with each other, it takes some time to get what could be considered as your dream sound. But the important thing is...your dream sound IS in there!!!!!

Sound Quality : 10
I think the most important thing to do is look at this effect unit not as a pedal...but as a great sounding Marshall Plexi in a very small package. I don't know why the knobs aren't labled easier but hey...they sound fancy. Ressonance should be bass, voicing should be middle, highs should be treble. Volume and distortion knobs are self explanitory. The saturation knob is a mystery to me...it sounds crappy to me when set past 12 o'clock...I use mine on zero. The two internal trimmers are where the real magic happens with this pedal. Man what a differance when i changed them (i turbed the left trimmer full up and the other just an 1/8 of a turn from where it was from the factory). The pedal went from a mild overdrive to almost an exact replica of the tone i got with my Tube Driver, and for me it's perfect.

I use a Strat, Tele (and will soon get a Jaguar) through a Fulltone Clyde Standard >> re-issue three knob Tone Bender (a Fulltone Soul Bender is in my future) >> Fulltone Distorion Pro >> Fulltone Fat Boost >> EXH Small Stone phaser >> EXH Small Clone chorus (a Fulltone Choralflange is also down the road) >> Ernie Ball Volume Pro JR >> all George L's cables with unfinished ends >> Marshall JTM 45 re-issue with Tesla 6l6's and a solid state rectifier >> Doyle CE Stereo 4x12.

I bought this pedal to replace my old Chandler Tube Driver because it was getting to fragile and noisy. The Distortion Pro doesn't make a noise and makes some of the most natural distortion tones i've ever heard. It works well with my other pedals and is true-bypass. It takes a lot of tweaking, but i suggest you sit down in front of your amp and just spend a couple of hours (or even a day) in complete silence save for the sound you make with your guitar amp and pedal to fine tune and tweak this pedal.

My guitar idols are Jimi Hendrix, John Frusciante of Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Eric Johnson. With this pedal I can nail any possible distortion tone i want. I realize for some, the ammount of distortion will not be enough for some players. This is not a metal box or a fuzz....it's is a great natural, tube sounding distortion. I'm 20 years old, I've been playing for nearly 10 years and I've tried it all. If you have it in your hands you can make this pedal sound as heavy as you want but don't get discouraged if you can't....just practice playing more!!!

Simply a fantastic sounding pedal...couldn't be happier!!!!!!!!!

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank in the Fulltone pedal building tradition. I don't see any reson to take a backup on the road. I haven't had any problem whatsoever. In my opinion, Mr. Fuller should have enginered the battery compartment better....in the car after i bought the pedal, as soon as i looked at the knurled knob that screws out I thought "well this is the first thing i will lose" and seconds later as I was screwing it out it fell out onto the floor of the car and had to be retrived with extreme patience. I think Mr. Fuller would just shake his head though :)

Customer Support : 10
I have chosen incredibaly kind and helpful...here is why...
Mr. Fuller and his company make some of the best sounding pedals known to man. I would rather him be building and designing pedals than being on the phone with me gabbing about how I lost the knurled knob for the battery compartment which I know is why a lot of people call him: things they can figure out on their own!!!! If you have an honest question....make it simple and to the point and as short as possible. E-mails always come back very quickly....don't ask stupid questions and you wont get mean answers. We should all be so lucky to be able to talk directly to the man responsible for our godly tones. Props to Michael Fuller for doing everything he does as far as customer assitance goes!!!

Overall Rating : 10
This is the perfect distortion pedal for me period. I play in a Canadian band called See Spot Run and have been playing guitar for 9 years. I work in a restaurant and bakery for my day job and make very little money doing it. These pedals (all Fulltone) are incrediablly expensive for me but I want the best. There is no reason why money should come into question when considering what you are getting for it. This pedal is compact, versatile, responsive to attack, quiet, and reliable. I would definatly buy another if it got stolen. It inspires me to keep playing for hours on end. Thank you mr Fuller for making such an amazing sonic tool for me to create the most amazing form of expression with: music.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $140 used
Submitted 03/29/2004 at 03:16pm by Evan Endicott
Email: evan_endicott<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 6
Well, it's got a lot of knobs, and I found that a lot of settings actually produced "bad" sounds, despite all the reviewers who scream, "Impossible to get a bad sound out of this magical red box!" etc. "Bad" meaning (to my ears) artificial, buzzy or harsh types of tones. Not smooth and rich like my Fulldrive II. I found the four small knobs sort of awkward to operate. I think there are some great settings on this pedal, but they're not that easy to dial in. The manual is a good place to start, although somewhat limited. Compared to other distortion pedals with two or three knobs, this thing is like rocket science, so I give it a 6.

Sound Quality : 6
I bought this pedal after reading heaps of praise and owning some great Fulltone products, and I just don't understand the hype. I found one really usable setting with which I could cop a super-saturated type of lead tone. Add some chorus with the Choralflange and it's pure Slash circa Use Yr Illusion. The thing is, I'm not really into that sound. In fact, I find it kind of ludicrous. I actually used this pedal live to play an ironic 80s guitar solo with a friend's band. And it nailed it! The crowd went nuts. But when trying to find "my" sound, the sound in my head, I came up empty-handed. I ran across tons of shitty settings on this thing, and I really had to tweak like a fiend to get the harshness out of this pedal. By contrast, I recently got a Foxrox ZIM. I thought it might be a bitch to tweak as well because of all the voicing settings, but to my surprise, it's the complete opposite of this pedal in that almost all of the settings, even the extreme ones, are totally musical sounding. It's like Dave Fox found this entire SPECTRUM of sweet spots and you can just precisely dial in your favorite flavor. Impressive. I sold my Distortion Pro on eBay shortly thereafter. To be fair, I never tried one of Mike's newer models, so maybe he's improved on the circuit. I don't know. I'm not out to bash Fulltone here, I just wanted to add a contrasting opinion to all the hype on this board. (For reference, I ran this pedal through a Dr. Z MAZ-18 combo. It sounded flat and artificial... definitely didn't make my amp sound like a Marshall, except for that one corny setting I mentioned above.)

Reliability : 8
Fulltone products are built to last. Very sturdy exterior, beautiful wiring inside. Although the little knobs on this pedal are definitely fragile, and two of them broke on me in the short time I had the pedal, so I gotta subtract points for that.

Customer Support : 9
Some people really hate Mike, but I'm not sure why. He's always responded to my emails and been a professional. Being able to talk to the creator of the product you use is a rare and tremendous thing. Don't abuse the guy or waste his time and he'll treat you well.

Overall Rating : 7
I've been playing for about 13 years and own a lot of effects, all boutique. Currently, I'm trying to simplify my pedal board. Not only in terms of how many pedals are on there, but how easy each pedal is to use. The ZIM is a major improvement over the Distortion Pro, because I can dial in tons of usable settings on the fly, with the twist of ONE KNOB instead of the DP's FOUR. I use a Fulldrive II for overdrive sounds and again, simplicity is the key to that pedal's greatness. I have an early model, no toggle switch, just set your volume, your drive and go. I'm getting to a point where I would rather have a pedal do a few tones really well than be endlessly tweakable. I really think the best gear is the simplest. Look at the TS-808 and all the clones it has inspired. Or the Ross compressor everyone is remaking now. Or an even better example: my $50 vintage Small Stone outphases the Lovetone Doppelganger I paid $400 for! Am I alone here? Do more knobs make a pedal "better"? Unless it's a Fuzz Factory, my answer is a resounding NO. That being said, if anyone wants to trade an Analogman Clone Chorus for my Fulltone Choralflange, get in touch and help me achieve Effects Zen!


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $199
Submitted 03/26/2004 at 07:09am by Jeff Glixman

Ease of Use : 10
Very straightforward , if you don't mind having alot of flexability!

Sound Quality : 10
Absolutely tweakable, with none of the fake Boss Metal bullsh^&% sounds, just very ORGANIC Marshall-like tones here, and you can dial in the original "string" sound via the "Saturation" control and get a very articualte Dumble-like amp sound.

Reliability : 10
built like a Hummer

Customer Support : 10
All questions answered quickly, Mike even steered me AWAY from buying another of his products because he felt it wouldn't work for me.
Now that's the nice thing about a successful company like Fulltone....they don't NEED the money like these other weekend booteek companies so they can and ARE objective and helpful.

Overall Rating : 10
Get one, try it, if you are a geek who uses the Mesa Triple rectifier or the Marshall "I got 4 channels up my butt" Metal Monster....stay clear, go away, get a Boss pedal. If you have EARS,and like Harmonics (no, not the pathetic homo-squeels that Zack Wilde does) we're talkin' Overtones, natural beautiful liquid sound) then the DistortionPro is the ONLY way to go!


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 03/07/2004 at 07:21pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
See other reviews or website for the specs. Easy to use once you get the hang of the unit's fine-tuning capabilities. Read the manual for Mike's tips. Mine is the 2003 version so it has the upgrades - I can't comment on the sound quality of earlier units.

Sound Quality : 9
This is a REALLY good distortion pedal. I set mine as follows (o'clock positions): Volume = whatever, Distortion = 12:00, Resonance = 1:00, Voicing = 9:00, Highs = 12:00, Saturation = all the way off. I'm using a Tom Anderson guitar through a Mesa Rocket 4-Forty (4x10 Jensens). George L's cables all the way.

This setting creates a nice distortion for soloing - very warm, singing, not at all harsh, actually a very "clean" distortion if you know what I mean. If you can play guitar well and can control the distortion, it sounds beautiful.

If you can't play guitar well, turn the Distortion and Saturation knobs to maximum and you'll get a sound similar to the modified BOSS DS-1's that Analogman and Keeley churn out. Lots of compression, more sustain and dirt... makes hiding mistakes easier.

The pedal cleans up very well when backing down on the guitar's volume knob.

The pedal has a slightly dark voice, which I prefer to the overly bright BOSS DS-1. It has just the right amount of top end to sound detailed yet smooth with a clean Fender/Mesa. It must sound amazing through a good Marshall.

Reliability : 10
Open up any Fulltone pedal and take note of how immaculate and well constructed it is. Mike knows his shit.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with Mike, and will probably never need to.

Overall Rating : 9
I've been learning guitar and playing music for nearly 20 years. Mostly play blues/jazz/funk. I really like this pedal. Nice one Mike!


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $197
Submitted 03/07/2004 at 11:57am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
2003 model. Very easy to use. As said before, you start with setting examples and then adjust it to your taste. Actually to get a bad sound out of it your really have to look for it.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using it with a fender AV '62 stratocaster. This is the best distortion pedal I ever used. What's particularly incredible is that it makes my blues junior for instance sound big, and my custom vibrolux reverb HUGE. First time I plugged it with my band, everybody asked if I had bought a new amp or a new guitar. The is fat, present, very natural sounding. I only use the "browner sound" setting. No need for a 200-channel switching amp.

Reliability : 10
Bult like a tank, as it has become proverbial to say about fulltone pedals. Don't have backup, clever access to the battery, nice red colour, will look great when 20 years old and chipped and nicked.

Customer Support : 1
Here's the rub, as Hamlet would say. Mike Fuller won't agree to sell his pedals internationnally any more, though I had bought my Fulldrive 2 direct a couple of years before. Why did it work once and not anymore? Credit card seem to be the issue, but I had sent a prepaid money order. So I ordered it through the internet from a very very nice store located in Seattle. An other thing, he wouldn't reply my emails. I know he's busy but hey if I want to spend $999 on a TTE I expect at least a one-sentence answer. Maybe he just doesn't care about some obscure French guitar player. Anyway, I decided to buy other brand's products.

Overall Rating : 8
Great for every guitar-driven, rock music. Turns any good tube amp into a Marshall (and a good one). That by itself is a feat. I only wish it cleaned up even better. But the crunch I'm lusting for has to be asked from my amp, and not from this pedal that is build for distortion.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $217.00
Submitted 03/03/2004 at 01:12pm by Mark
Email: Steadz1 at bellsouth<dot>net

Ease of Use : 8
What a great distortion pedal. Fairly easy to use but you have to learn about the fine tuning capabilities to get the fantastic variety of sounds that this pedal can produce. The two large knobs are Distortion and Volume. They have the greatest affect on sound when adjusted. The other four knobs are marked Resonance, Voicing, Highs, and Saturation. It is very interesting how sensative these small knobs are and how they interact to shape the many high quality sounds that the box can generate. Mike gives you a few diagrahms inside the manual for Clapton's Cream sound, an SRV sound, and a AC/DC distortion. The manual is laid out well and is informative without being too wordy. My unit was made in 03, and is numbered in the 2700's, so it has the latest modifications that improved the overall sound of the pedal (see other reviews or Fulltone website). Start with Mike's settings and learn how to shape your own sound. The pedal is simple to use at a glance, but you must experiment to fully understand how to produce the variety of sounds that can be made with this effect box.

Sound Quality : 10
Fantastic! My usual setup is a 97 Fender American Standard Stratocaster, into a Boss CS-3 Compressor, and into a 1984-86 Blackface Fender Deluxe Reverb II, all tube amplifier. It was designed by Paul Rivera when he worked for Fender. I only add other effects as needed. I also use the same setup through a 1977 Silverface Fender Princeton, all tube amplifier. I use the clean side of the amp when using the Deluxe Reverb II. The distortion tones that the Distortion Pro generates through either amp just are incredible. Complex, warm, not buzzy or metallic sounding. The Highs knob allows you to cut back the treble and remove shrill sounds even when using the bridge position pickup. You can get a very mild distortion or a very extreme distorted sound, or anything in between. Right now my settings are set for a "Reeling In The Years" tone. The box nails that sound. Also, Robin Trower's "Long Misty Days" sound can easily achieved making my small Fender sound much like Robin's Marshalls. I am really pleased with this pedal and feel better about the cost now that I realize the variety of distorted tones that can be conjured up by turning any of the six adjustment knobs. I can even take my Tube Screamer out of the chain since this pedal can make a great overdrive sound as well. True bypass is a must for every other pedal I buy in the future. With the box off there is no loss to your signal. I was really leary of spending $200+ on a small red box but now I am very glad that I did.

Reliability : 10
I have used the pedal nearly every day for about six weeks. I play out twice a week, and have used it on one recording in the studio with great results. I place it in the original box and store it inside my effects gig bag after every use and before transporting it back and forth. It is made of heavy sheet metal construction and all of the parts appear to be high quality. This is my first Fulltone box but it seems to be made in a way that will assure dependability. I don't have an exact backup, but could rely on my Tube Screamer if I had to. You wouldn't get the same sounds since the Tube Screamer is different. I will go on other reviewers rating and the Fulltone name. To access the battery compartment you unscrew a small screw with a knurled head. This can be done with your fingers. The only complaint that I have is that you have to completely remove the screw to open the access door. This opens up an opportunity to lose the screw. This is a nit so I will not deduct points. It would be nice to have the screw attached to the door somehow. That way you wouldn't lose it if you accidentally dropped it on a dark stage. Again, mine was signed by Mike and is numbered in the 2,700s. Obviously Fulltone doesn't stamp these things out like doughnuts. This is quality stuff by someone who knows how to play the guitar.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Have not used CS. Sounds like they respond well. Try calling Ibanez or Boss! I bought this pedal at my local Guitar Center. They guaranteed it for thirty days. Just enough time for me to decide if I wanted to keep it. The best part is I wouldn't have to mail it back to Fulltone. My Guitar Center plans on carrying the full line of Fulltone pedals. Keep your eyes open. They lock them behind the counter and let you demo them only with a G Center sales rep. Mike is busy hand building these things so don't pester him without a just cause. It only slows down production for the people that need Fulltone effects. I will definately buy more eventually. Maybe the Vox 847 wah mod is next. Mine is sounding limited.

Overall Rating : 10
I play rock, jazz, blues, folk, etc...This is the best distortion pedal that I have ever used. I compared it to MXR's $79.00 small yellow distortion box. Their box sounded great, but the number of sounds that it can produce is nothing compared to the Distortion Pro. I also compared the Distortion Pro to the Fulltone Fulldrive II. The Fulldrive II is very nice, but it is more of an overdrive pedal, and the Distortion Pro wins the comparison due to the variety of high quality sounds it produces. The Fulldrive II would be a great replacement for my Tube Screamer. I like it much better than the TS9 Turbo with the TS808 mod. The Boss DS-1 and Electo Harmonix Big Muff are okay, but still not at the level of the Distortion Pro. The Distortion Pro can do it all. Highly recommended over any overdrive or distortion pedal that I have ever played through. Do yourself a favor and get one of these. Although it is a bit pricey, you will not regret it.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: 260 (Cdn.)
Submitted 02/09/2004 at 09:18pm by Dr. G.

Ease of Use : 8
This pedal is a 2002 with the recent Fulltone 03' upgrade. This one takes a small investment in time before the tonal range is explored. The upside is this pedal has many tones lurking within.

Sound Quality : 9
My rating of 9 requires some explanation. I bought this pedal for my rig (57' LP with Matchless HC-30). I could not get a good sound out of this set up, rolled off highs and muddy lows. I gave up on this pedal and gave it to a friend. With his set up (60's Strat with a 50 Watt Plexi) the sound was complex and dynamic. As we played around it apppears it is the Class A power amp stage that the DP does not like. This pedal clearly responds to the equipment you have. Like all pro gear this pedal is intended for rehearsal/gig volumes, if you want to hear this baby sing make sure you are at least driving your power amp stage. It will deliver a wide and impressive tonal range as Fulltone describes on their website.

Reliability : 10
Everything Fulltone makes is well made. I own several of Fuller's pedals and have been impressed with the quality, consistency and durability.

Customer Support : 2
I have e-mailed Fulltone on several occassions without any response. When they have responded to my questions the response was often sarcastic and non-helpful. Oh-well if I wanted a friend I should have bought a dog.

Overall Rating : 8
A great pedal if it works with your set-up. I would suggest you demo this one before you buy. I can say that when it likes your equipment it will deliver an impressive range of tone. I have been playing for a mere 30 years and this opinion (I hope) reflects some wisdom of experience.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $150
Submitted 01/29/2004 at 06:39pm by chris s.
Email: chrisscarborough<at>charter dot net

Ease of Use : 9
mine is a 2003 model. as stated below, these apparently are better than the older ones. with all the knobs, it may take more tweaking than usual on pedals, but the end result is that it is worth it. manual provides good starting points.

Sound Quality : 9
i have to say one of the best OD's out there. strats, teles, LP, 335. mostly using fender vibro king sometimes with 212 extention cab. sounds great with all, but humbuckers do change the settings.

Reliability : 9
had this about 3 months, no problem.

Customer Support : 10
only dealing was i had a knob strip on my fulldrive II. no idea how it happened, but emailed company and they offered new one for no charge. sweet

Overall Rating : 9
been playing 25 yrs. mostly southern rock, blues, rock and country. Od is probably over the top for country. play in touring groups for 15 yrs. this is a great "ingredient" in the mix. if you have a problem getting good sound, it is probably one of two reasons. 1- you cant play and don't know the difference. or 2- you probably have crappy gear. it is amazing how much difference it makes. down to the cables. this pedal will really make a good setup sing. i use it with my fulldrive as a boost when needed. awesome. it is not cheap, but the thing about this and the fdII is that although you get the od/ sustain, different guitars still retain their voice which is rare among pedals. true bypass is a big difference as well. i never have personally used a ts9 that didn't suck tone something fierce when turned off.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $165.00
Submitted 01/27/2004 at 10:16pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
This pedal is not as much plug and play as the Full-Drive 2 but taking some time to sit and fiddle with the six knobs will result in finding the tone that you are searching for. The manual is extremely helpful in terms of finding a starting point. Usually I do not even bother to look at the manuals but this one helped.

Sound Quality : 10
So far I ahve only played it with my Les Paul Classic. There is zero noise with this pedal and it sounds amazing. I am using it with a Full-Drive 2, Ultimate Octave, Mini Deja' Vive and a Budda Wah through a Johnson J-Station set to the Blackface for direct recording. The Blackface simulation in the J-Station is by far the best I have found and I own a Boss GT-6 and GT-5, a POD XT and a Yamaha DG Stomp. I plan on purchasing a Palmer Speaker SImulator so that I can use my all tube Fender Twin for direct recording. I can easily get anything from an Eddie Van Halen tone to a Steve Lukather tone to a flat out Tripple Rectifier.

Reliability : 10
As with Fulltone pedals, this one is built to last and has impeccable craftsmanship. No concerns here.

Customer Support : 10
I have emailed Mike Fuller and got an immediate response that more than answered my question.

Overall Rating : 10
Overall, this pedal has gone beyond takeing care of my high gain needs. I can get as much bottom end as I desire from this all while getting crips highs and an overall tubey feel. This has become my main go to high gain pedal and has become indespensible in terms of getting a great tone.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $197.10
Submitted 01/27/2004 at 08:05pm by Georges

Ease of Use : 10
Distortion Pro (DP-1), built in 10/03/03. The instructions in the Owners Manual are crystal clear.

Sound Quality : 10
I used a Gibson Les Paul style guitar (Heritage H-150CM Classic) with Seymour Duncan SH-55 Seth Lover model passive pickups (The SH-55 was designed jointly by Seymour and humbucker inventor Seth Lover. Just like the original 1955 P.A.F.s, the SH-55 utilizes a nickel silver bottom plate, butyrate plastic bobbins; plain enamel wire, an Alnico bar magnet, a wooden spacer, and black paper tape. The SH-55 uses a nickel silver cover instead of brass, which magnetically eliminates too much of the pickup's natural high-end tone. To be completely true to the original design and tone, the pickup is not wax potted. The tone is vintage P.A.F. The neck pickup will warm up even the coldest guitar, and the unpotted covers give the bridge pickup just enough boldness to break up early and really cut), a 10' and 15' Planet Wave cable, and a Peavey Classic 50-212 amplifier (retubed with JJ Electronic tubes: see www.eurotubes.com). I plugged my guitar into the DP-1, then the DP-1 into the, "Normal", input and played in the, "Normal Channel".

Reliability : No Opinion
Can I depend on it? It's worked perfectly so far...Would I use it on a gig without a backup? Yes this pedal is an addendum to my guitar sound, not it's lynchpin.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing African American Gospel music, CCM, C&W, R&B, R&R for 24 years. This is the best distortion pedal on the planet and the first (hopefully not only :) )Fulltone pedal you should buy (see Gilbert Jones' review below).


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $200
Submitted 01/23/2004 at 06:36pm by Gilbert Jones

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy to use. Just start turning the dials and you will soon come across many settings that you will like. As with any distortion box, the unit is very interactive with the volume control of the guitar.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using the lastest version sold in 2003/2004 and have to say that it is absolutely the best distortion box on the planet sound wise. I used to use an older version of the Distortion Pro that was the one GP magazine raved about, but it was noisy and had a harsh sound to it. Although the original was good, the latest version sounds much smoother and less brittle, and is definitely an improvement in more ways than one. Comes very close to sounding like a real tube amp.

The new version is so flexible that you can get tones that are covered by other Fulltone boxes such as the Fulldrive II. In other words, if you can only afford one of Mike's pedals this is the one.

It can be used by itself for super distortion or it can be used as an overdrive device to drive an already distorted amp into thicker distortion. It seems to excel at Vox and Marshall sounds although by turning down the guitar's volume control, you can get nice fender sounds as well.

The unit is very quit.

In sum, the latest version significantly out perfprms the old original DP in many noticeable ways. Believe me, the improvement is not subtle. I can't imagine anybody not liking it.


Reliability : 10
Built great. My original DP never had problems. Expect this one to last as well.

Customer Support : 10
I've corresponded with the Fulltone Service Dept once. They took care of me.

Overall Rating : 10
I play heavy metal, rock, classic, and some country. Been playing 20 years plus and have had many Marshall amps, Fender Amps, Mesa Amps, and even a Matchless amp. So I've had the good fortune of playing through some of the best. This pedal is right up there. In all honesty, the sound is so good, I often play it without any pre-amp distortion from the amplifier. By itself, it's as good sounding as an overdriven amp.

It it was stolen I'd buy another immediately. No hesitation.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid:
Submitted 01/15/2004 at 01:33pm by Norm Hammer
Email: ElectGumbo at aol<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
I fooled around with this pedal alot when I first got it. Turned the internal pots everything. Everything does something on this pedal everything changes. Got it set where it pretty much sounds like a Hor Rodded Marshall stack....even when pluged in to 4X10..1X12..2X12..1X15 combos. Manual is helpful to get you started. I found it hard to leave this pedal alone for the first few months...now I make very small adjustments to it depending on the amp or guitar I'm using. Leave the thing alone and Play Your Guitar!

Sound Quality : 10
Most tube like and smooth distortion I ever heard in a pedal. Reacts very much like a tube amp when using your volume knob on your guitar. Almost I repeat Almost disappears completely with guitar volume down around 2 or 2.5. Works fine with my Strats or Teles. When usinig Les Paul or PRS I turn down the distortion knob to get the desired amount of distortion....with singles coils I leave it all the way up. Not Noisy at all. Used with Reissue Marshall Bluesbreaker...old Music Man combos..early 70's HD-130 4X10...RD-100 1X12..RD-100 1X15... I find the RD's cheap around here so I pick them up for a song..I can do a gig with any of them. Soldano Decatone Head in to Marshall 4X12 cab. Don't use the pedal much with this amp cause well you don't need to but it still works well driving the Decatone.

I find the distortion very very smooth. NO Hair Ball or Buzz Bomb in it. YOu can get that by changing the internal pots which I tried...but you lose how it reacts to the guitars volume knob. I like jockeying the volume knob more then i need the grainy distortion.

I like how you can retain some of your guitars tone with this pedal. I don't know about the 1000 pound violin and the Eric Johnson tones. I love the fact that it sounds like a Cranked Marshall and it fits in my guitar's gig bag. On my regular gig in a Soul,R&B, Funk band I use it for solos only. But at the weekly blues jams or open mic nights I never turn it off all night. I love how people scratch there heads when I use the same Twin they just used with there Tube Screamer or whathaveyou and I go from clean to slight breakup to more drive and more drive and more drive ect.ect.ect....all on a volume knob. There is some thing almost Hi-Fi about the tone of it...to good to call it distortion.

ps...every once in a while that 1000 violin sound comes out all by itself

Reliability : 10
It's a Fulltone. Use a lot of there stuff. Out of of 7 or 8 Fulltones only had one switch fail. That was long ago and probably caused by not have a hard case for my pedal board. Never worry about a back up for any of them.

Customer Support : 10
Not to go in depth here....I have no problems with Mike or his company or his products. I love Fulltone and Fulltone loves me.

Overall Rating : 10
I'm your typical Jack of All Trades Master of None type guitar player. I've beening learning how to play for 30+ years. I say that cause I find myself still learning new and different things a lot lately. One day it's Wes Montgomery and Coltrane the next it's Hendrix(again), Trower, Marino, then it's Muddy, Buddy, Clapton, SRV. Oh let's not forget Joe Pass, Holdsworth, Eric Johnson. I still have so much to learn. I play a lot of covers from 50's Rock and Roll and 60's Soul/R&B..70's, 80's Rock...what... ever. Love to play straight blues in the right time and place. Gee I forgot Jimmy Page, Tommy Bolin, Jeff Beck, Jimmy Nolen, Nile Rogers,Vernon Reid,Danny Gatton, Roy Buchanan,Zappa,damn and oh Chuck Berry,ah Carlos Santana,,ect.ect.ect...

With all the different hype or likes and dislikes on here it's hard to make a dicision. All I know is the other night at a jam everyone was checking out my rig (68' Tele, $80 Music Man RD-100, DP1, Clyde) instead of the other guys Gibson Custom Shop 335, $3000 Two Rock in to JBL loaded cab. I can honestly say my tone was every bit as sweet fat round sustaining and singing as his. With a stock Tele no less.

Walk softly but carry a DP1 in your pocket.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/31/2003 at 09:26am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 9
This is a review based on the upgraded version. Fairly versatile pedal, there are so many reviews here that I'm not going to get into everything this pedal can do, but in short you can dial in any amount of lows, mid, and highs you want and with the saturation dial in a full compressed sound or back it off for blues or whatever.

Sound Quality : 10
My current set up is Les Paul Custom into clyde deluxe wah,into distortion pro,then choralflange into 50 watt Germino Rockgrinder with Groove tube KT66HP's and tube rectifier. My cab is a Germino 2x12 with one greenback and one Rola G1280. The reason I'm listing everything I use is because I think like most of us it has taken me years to find the tone I have heard in my head for thirty years and to maybe offer some advice to those who have listed negative reviews about this pedal. First and foremost is that tone starts with your amp. Then a good guitar, high quality cables, good pickups, a vintage cab or at least a cab that is made the way they use to make cabs. If you don't have any of these, how can you possibly fault the pedal. It even is stated on Fulltones web site that the afore mentioned thing's are almost a must to enjoy what this pedal can do to your tone. Nothing is a miracle in a box, it is simply a piece of the tone chain. If your tone chain sucks then you will continue to right bad reviews about most things you purchase! My goal here is not to piss people off because I did the same things for a long time. As far as the sound quality, this thing is absolute butter Period! No grainy distortion, it's almost as if there is no distortion, it's that smoothe. Very transparent and pure, tube tone. The best of the best out there today!

Reliability : No Opinion
The old cliche" built like a tank and have had no problems with it. I just make sure I put a fresh battery in before I play out.

Customer Support : 10
I sent my pedal on the 15th and UPS took seven days to get it ther and it arrived at fulltone on the 22nd, and Mike was going on vacation the 23rd so I thought it would be well into the new year until I got it back. Well I got it back on the 28th. They must have upgraded it and sent it the same day they received it. That's customer support!

Overall Rating : 10
I have been playing for 30 years and would replace it without question. I have tried the mass produced pedals and they aren't in the same class, not even close. It is dead quiet, and has True bypass and retains volume, clarity and power throughout the entire gig. It just adds to what already is a great tone. We play classic rock and with the right equipment you can nail, Cream, ACDC ZZ Top thge list goes on and on. Bottom line is Buy One!


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $135,00 Used
Submitted 12/26/2003 at 01:08am by Michael

Ease of Use : 1
6 knobs and two trim potis are not easy to ajust. After a longer time of tweaking you'll get it and you will know how it works.

Sound Quality : 3
I played it through a 73 Twin Reverb, a Blues Junior with V30, a 2554 Marshall and a JCM800 with Strats and Teles and it didn't sound good. I got a better result with my H&K 100W Tube Head. The H&K has much gain of of its own and the pedal worked best just to give that little bit of extra gain. But that's not what a high gain pedal ist meant for. The sound reminds me of that old Distortion+ from MXR that I don't like. I am shure after opening up this pedal that it is basicly a hot rodded Dist.+. It has also the same problem that after 3 a clock the distortion gets very muddy.

Reliability : 10
This ist where the pedal shines. Only made of the best parts and a very good metal box. I think it will last for ever

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with them.

Overall Rating : 3
This is a pedal that the world doesn't need. There are much better high gain pedals out there for a much better price. OK I bought it on Ebay for 135,00$ and sold it a few weeks later for 200,00$. That was the best experience I have made with the Distortion Pro. I wonder why there are so much people out there who pay such a high price fore a useless toy. I play guitar for 32 years. I tried a lot of pedals but I was rarely so disapointed. The problem is that Fulltone has no stomp box design of their own. They take old boxes and try some hodrodding. Mostly it works but not in this case.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/13/2003 at 02:37pm by RG
Email: south dot paw2<at>verizon dot net

Ease of Use : 10
2003 model. Very easy to use. Manual tone tweaking common sense knobs. True Bypass...awesome. Very easy to make this pedal sing.

Sound Quality : 10
This pedal sounds very good and specializes in big fat tone. Fulltone uses quality parts and construction. Out of the box and plugged into an amps clean channel, this pedal gives you open and dynamic distortion. Not modern compressed sounds. If you like the modern compressed hi-gain amps believe me, after you hear this pedal in action it is likely you'll realize how bad those compressed modern amps really are. This pedal will give you aggressively raunchy to smooth rock and roll tones, a huge pallet from which to select. Think vintage to 'hot rodded' Marshall's. Also, this pedal is gives great harmonic. True bypass is a must, pure guitar signal in and out. The above comments are based on running it thru your amp set on a clean sound. Basically, it will get you pretty close to any marshall type sound from the 60's, 70's, up to and including VH1.
If you use it with the GAIN channel of your amp or with a booster like the Fulldrive II (highly recommended), then you can get just about any sound from the past 35-40 yrs...add a good Keeley compressor (or similiar) to capture just about any rock sound currently out there.

Reliability : 10
As good as it gets. Outstanding warranty for pedasl that gets stomped on, daily!

Customer Support : 10
Excellent, pretty quick with emails and very cool to speak with on the phone.

Overall Rating : 10
This pedal is an outstanding value given the range of sounds possible, hand-made tough construction, 5 year warranty, and don't forget TRUE Bypass (it makes all the difference). Also, unlike other pedals, the Fulltones seem to retain their value.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $220.00$
Submitted 12/06/2003 at 06:47pm by KRIS
Email: knwhite59 at juno<dot>com

Ease of Use : 7
the distortion pro has a fairly steep learning curve,you don"t just plug and play.as mike fuller states the controls are very interactive in a sneaky sort of way.I think 1 or 2 weeks of experience with the unit will deliver amazing tones,although shit in, shit out....

Sound Quality : 10
this is my chain vox wah-distortion pro-experience pedal-deja vibe2-ADA tube preamp[modified by me from a marshall style cathode follower circuit courtesy mark howell and ADA DEPOT.COM]--Alesis midi verb2-2 marshall slp plexi reissue 100 watt heads-2 marshall 4\12 cabs with 25 watt greenbacks .

Reliability : 10
I have owned 2 distortion pros the first one a piece of stem on a pot fell off misterously.I superglued it back in place,other than that there have been no problems at all

Customer Support : 5
have not had to use it yet...

Overall Rating : 10
I am able to get any distortion/overdrive tone short of full out fuzz with it particularly good is a van halen 1-2 slightly sqished sound setting with my rig level 2 o"clock,distortion-0,res-9 o:clock,voicing4 o:clock,highs -off, sat-4-5 o"clock also can cop joe satriani live tone dead on.also,the unit prefers single coil and normal gibson humbuckers paf reissue are good unit did mud up with real hot pickups[over 12 k]I adjust the internal trimmers only to put them back where mike set them.. I find the unit a bit hot but liked turning the distortion off and using the remaining controls... Its much more like a great overdrive with powerful tone shapeing than any conventional distortion box I LOVE MINE ...


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/11/2003 at 01:58pm by Dale Robinson

Ease of Use : No Opinion
N/A

Sound Quality : 10
This is a follow-up to an earlier review. I had the 2002 version and felt really uncomfortable with it. The pedal was very aggressive and hard to control at gig volume. It had a grainy quality to the distortion that was unpleasent to me. I saw the 2003 upgrade offer on the Fulltone website and thought "Why not." I sent it in with $10 to cover shipping. WHAT A DIFFERENCE !!! It's so much smoother and easier to control. I've had it back a week and can't stop playing with it. How's that for inspiration. My once "razorsharp lazerbeam" twin can sound like a fat warm plexi if I want it to. The tweek buttons don't seem to respond as drastically as before the upgrade. This make them much more useable and user friendly. I can play my Les Paul on 5,6 or 7 with a good rock tone then roll up to 10 and just sizzle and sustain with very ear pleasing saturation. the pedal also responds to right hand (pick hand)technique. If you dig, you hear it in the dynamics of the pedal. Sorry to go on and on, but I can't say enough about the improvements the 2003 chip upgrade made.

Reliability : 10
Best made pedals on the market.

Customer Support : 9
Emailed about the upgrade. Got an answer that day.
I sent my pedal in UPS- Fulltone got it on a Friday. I got it back the following Friday. You figure 3 days shipping each way- They had it about 2 days. That is about as fast as it gets. the charged me $10 to ship it back. It cost me $7 to ship it in. No charge for upgrade.
I'd give them a 10 if they ate the shipping.

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $200 used
Submitted 10/26/2003 at 04:07pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 2
It had internal trimmers. Woohoo. I still could not get a reasonable sound out of it. This pedal is massively adjustable, but the problem is that you have to spend many hours tweaking it to get a good sound. and, if you play a 2-humbucker jobbie, just forget about it. tweaking is everything with fulltone pedals, in my experience. if you want to spend the time on it, cool. i don't.

Sound Quality : 4
It sounds absolutely spectacular- on the bridge pickup of a good Strat, with a good bridge pickup. I have NOT been able to make it sound good with anything else, for lead style. i think it's possible to make this pedal sound really good for a lot of styles, but after spending 6 months on it, frankly, i don't feel like tweaking anymore.
this is not for the person who likes to just plug a guitar in, and have a good distortion sound.
one thing i've noticed with Fulltone pedals- if you don't play a single-coil pickup, all bets are off. all his pedals seem to be built for single-coils. the difference in sound quality b/w my strat and 2-humbucker jobbie (both with decent seymour duncan vintage-style pickups) was immense. single coils sounded great. humbuckers sounded like crap, even after adjusting the internal gain trimmers way down. go figure.
in it's defense- if you can tweak it, when you nail the settings, it sounds totally awesome. too bad my strat died a few weeks after that :\
but do NOT think you can buy this pedal, plug it in, and expect massively good tone. you will work, very hard, for your tone. in my case, i worked, and i found the tone was not worth it.

Reliability : 8
whatever i might have to say about tone quality and ease of use, fulltone pedals are ridiculously well constructed. the box is solid steel, the LED and switch are patented top-quality. cold day in hell before you catch me complaining about build quality or reliablity in one of these pedals. these things are SOLID.
caveat: i don't play out. but i have broken a few pedals. so, my rating on this area is not really valid.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never dealt with fulltone's customer support. the manual is pretty good, tho.

Overall Rating : 3
i'm selling mine. might get a foxey fuzz, or a cheapie disortion, not sure. the ts-9 does well for most of my drive/distortion needs, and is easier to use. if the pedal was cheaper, i'd be more forgiving. but this is a boutique pedal that really doesn't justify it's price. this thing was being played thru a Dr Z Maz-18, and i just couldn't take the awful sound anymore, after 6 months of tweaking.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $200.00
Submitted 10/21/2003 at 07:52pm by Tim Schulz
Email: tjstrat2 at comcast<dot>net

Ease of Use : 9
This is an update to a review from early 2002. My first DP1 really sounded awful. Could not get a useful tone out of it. Perhaps because it was one of the first hundred, perhaps for some other reason, but it was dreadful. This one is 1000% better. Giving it a 9 simply because of option anxiety due to its sensitivity and versatility.

Sound Quality : 10
I've used it live with a Rivera R-55 and an '88 Mesa Mark III and have been pretty happy. This pedal cleans up magnificently at the guitar, probably better than any other pedal I've ever used. Not too noisy, but so far I've used it with a PRS Standard and a Hamer Artist, both humbucker equipped. Playing with single coils or hybrids results in a little more noise and hum, but nothing outlandish. The massive improvement over the original pedal I had comes in far better sustain and far less fizz in the pedal's decay. My first pedal had a very obvious sizzle in the note's decay, similar to the awful electronic crackle that the Prescription Electronics Dual Tone possesses. This pedal sounds far darker and more natural than that one. Very fluid sustain. Very violin-y tone; Eric in a box, as others have commented. Much improved.

Reliability : 10
Nevr had any issues with Fuller's build quality at all. If this failed, I could easily default to amp channel overdrive, which is always an option for me. The DP1 gives me a fourth and sometimes fifth option for amp tone. After owning a number of Fulltone products I have no doubt that this will prove every bit as reliable as those.

Customer Support : 9
Mike's Mike. Doesn't suffer fools well (so I try not to bug him too often...), but has always responded to service issues I may have had. Sent a replacement footswitch for a Fat Boost a couple years ago at no charge, and it arrived in Illinois from California in a couple of days.

Overall Rating : 10
Jazz fusion/funk and variety music. Playing for 30 years now. Own loads of stuff. My old mid-80s Rat is still a benchmark distortion pedal for me, but I haven't really used many outboard distortion pedals since buying the Mesa I have in '88. Other amps are a Budda SD30 and a Rivera R55, both high gain beasts that have more than enough distortion. Again, pedals like the FDII, the Banzai Fireball I, and the DP1 supply some extra distortion options for me. These all sound like very natural extensions of the amps' tones. In fact, the DP1 in its high gain mode has a very similar buttery tone to the Mark III's lead channel. This is definitely more in line with what I had in mind back in early '02.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: 205 (# sterling)
Submitted 10/09/2003 at 03:45pm by Tony

Ease of Use : 8
Pretty straightforward really - anyone who can read will be able understand what the various knobs do.

Sound Quality : 1
I use a levinson blade R4 + KA hot rails in the bridge > MXR dynacomp > crybaby > sparkle drive > Boss SD1 > Fulltone DP1 > Tonebone Hot British > Fender Pro-Reverb with Lexicon MPXG2 in the loop for post gain FX, Rvb, delay etc.,

For the first time in my life I bought a pedal on the strength of reviews and I have to say I am disappointed in every way. I am a serious player of 25 years and however I try to use the DP-1 I just cannot get a decent sound out of it.

The DP-1 sounds brittle with a very harsh top end and little useable sustain. It sounds absolutely nothing like a valve amp! With the rig I use I can easily achieve great "just breaking up" and blues tones, I wanted the DP-1 for a much more sustainy saturated sound but it was a massive let down.

I have tweaked the internal trimmers, which do make a difference but you pay a huge price for increased sustain because what you get is a mushy bottom end, too much compression and a ton of uncontrollable feedback.

And it stinks with single coils - it breaks up all over the place and sounds more like a 100lb pile of dung than a 100lb violin.

I cannot get a single useable sound out of this thing - do yourself a favour and check out everything else on the market before you buy a DP-1.

Reliability : No Opinion
I will never find out if it's reliable as I would never use it live and it's now for sale. Note: these things don't resell for anything like their retail price - enough said!

Customer Support : 1
I emailed Mike Fuller (very politely) as I was so frustrated that I couldn't get this thing sounding decent and asked for his suiggestions / help.

That was nearly 2 months ago and neither Mike, nor anyone from his company has replied.

Overall Rating : 1
I have played sessions, gigs and taught guitar for 25 years, I imagine anyone stupid enough to steal one of these will probably be disappointed with it too. It's going as soon as someone offers me anything like what I paid for it.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 09/24/2003 at 04:20am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : No Opinion
i think its pretty eay. I set it using the EJ patch in the manual, and then tweaked alittle here and there. Greats sound.

Sound Quality : No Opinion
Excellent. I got the 100lb violin thing going with single notes, but I dial in a bit more edge with the high end knob. So I sound like a violin that will kick your ass. ALso sounds very clean, what you put in is what comes out, so sharpen you chops if you dont like the pedal.

Reliability : No Opinion
fulltone = good shit with a great service department.

Customer Support : No Opinion
see above. sent mine in for chip upgrade, $10 and a week later it was back in my hands. Cool.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
if you want more out of your dist boxes , get this, and tweak.
I dig it. Also sounds great goosing an already distorted amp.
All around great value in a nice small box. Can you dig it?


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $199
Submitted 09/16/2003 at 11:29am by CharlesL

Ease of Use : 9
Out of curiosity, I took the unit out of the box and plugged it in. It sounded great. The tone was very tube-like and organic with the controls in the neutral positions. This pedal is a tweakers wet dream. I am not a tweaker, so I was pleased to find that the setting suggetions were good starting places to find the tones you are looking for. I am giving this a nine rating because it is not a simple device. You could spend days and weeks getting to know the nuances of each of the six control parameters of this pedal.

Sound Quality : 10
My setup is a G&L Legacy and ASAT, a 1970s Gibson SG, and a Guild Bluesbird. I play these through a Fender Deluxe Reverb Reissue and a Marshall AVT 50 (a fantastic amp that has replaced my 50 watt Plexi). I play this pedal exclusively through the Marshall. I have noticed no real jump in noise through this pedal. The distortion is like my old Plexi, only you can enjoy it at much lower volume. My plexi has to be up around 8 to reach this tone. You can cop the EJ and EVH tone pretty easily. The Brian May tone is less obvious to me. I use this pedal with only a Line6 Delay Modeler and they interact very well. My tone is close to the EJ violin tone, and this pedal makes it very easy to get there. I already had great tone, and this pedal has made it even better.

Reliability : 10
No problems here. This pedal feels like a brick with some wiring inside. I no longer gig outside the studio, but I would have a backup. It is just the smart way to gig. It is probably more important to back up your power source than the pedals, in my experience.

Customer Support : 10
I have emailed Mike and the sales department 3 times. I always received a reply by the time I woke up in the morning. Bravo to the operation Mike Fuller has set up. They have made a believer out of me.

Overall Rating : 10
I play Gilmour and Alan Parsons Project(Ian Bairnson rules all) type music, with some fusion tendencies. I own a Big Muff Pi, Boss DS-1, DOD OD250, Boss BD1, Fuzz Face, and a Chandler tube overdrive. This pedal will replace all of them, but I will keep them on my shelf to impress the youngsters. I also purchased a custom shop Fulldrive2. These two pedals together will handle all of my overdive and distrtion needs from now on. I was torn between this and a tonebone classic distortion. I am so glad I chose the Distortion Pro. The tonebone sounds great, but this sounds better. My good friend owns a tonebone and he wants to trade. If it were stolen, I would replace it immediately. I have played since the hair metal days of the late 80s(I like that era more now than I ever did then, new music is sad). I am being sincere to say this is a powerful tone generator. It is very expensive, but this is one of those rarest of instances, you get what you pay for. I am now a GOLDEN GOD.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $195.00
Submitted 09/12/2003 at 09:01pm by Tim Hase
Email: timhase at yahoo<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
Pedal very easy to use. Could not find a bad sound out it with my gear. Manual gives you a great start.

Sound Quality : 10
I play various Strats with all types of single coil pickups. My amps are a Peavey Classic 50 with 4x10's, a Fender Blues DeVille, and a Mesa Dual Recto with a 4x12 cab. and a 2x12 cab. Don't bring everything to every gig. Club or hall size determines what gear is used.

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank. All Fultone pedals are built this way.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Nothing yet but, from what I've heard, very cool.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I play in a 70's and 80's cover band. Guitar rock, no metal, like listening to a lot of the FM stations out there. It's perfect for that style. Just tweak the dials a little bit and you got the sounds you need. I don't try to sound like anyone else, never have, never will. That's why I like the Pro. It's responds so well to the volume, and dynamics of your playing, you have your own sound with it. It is a very musicial sound. The manual mentions the violin sound, it's in there.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $179
Submitted 09/12/2003 at 07:06pm by DanL

Ease of Use : No Opinion
You've got to tweak the knobs for a while to get the tone you're looking for. But for me, it was worth it. The manual is pretty good at getting you familiar with the features of the pedal and how to tweak it.

Sound Quality : 8
Well, here's the deal. Lately, I've been getting into a tone with the high end rolled off. Perhaps because I've been listening to a lot of Eric Johnson...not sure. So that's how I set up my Dist Pro and it sounds awesome to me. I set the distortion level all the way up, sustain almost all the way up, voicing knob about half way, highs rolled way back, bass up a little more than half way. If I was going for more of a biting, cutting type sound I probably would have gone with something else because when set up that way ...the pedal is not much better than a lot of cheaper pedals out there. I bought my Fulltone Fulldrive2 and my Distorion Pro on the same day...about 2 months ago. I am soooooooo glad I bought both pedals. To me, the Distortion Pro picks up where the FD2 leaves off. Know what I mean? The way I've got both pedals set up, I get very fat, fluid, full bodied tones that sing with lots of sustain.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
I play rock, jazz, fusion and blues. 29 years of experience...tons of pedals..(Boss, ProCo, Vox, etc..) about 10 amps and 10 guitars...notably a Strat, Tele, Les Paul, ES-335, etc...and Marshall and Boogie half stacks + 4 Fender tube amps: DRRI, HotRod DeVille 2x12, Blues Jr. and Prosonic combo.

If you're in the market for a full sounding distortion pedal, you should check out this pedal. To me it works best set up to get a "rolled-off highs", very saturated kind of distortion. Set up this way, it's a killer box. Oh, and don't be put off by the tone the first time you turn it on...you'll probably need 5-10 minutes of knob tweaking before you dial in something you like...or really like. Sweet pedal.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $187
Submitted 08/15/2003 at 06:45am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
Just plug into your amp and adjust the knobs until you hear somthing you like. As far as I'm concerned all positions sounded great.
The manual does a good job of detailing functions.
This unit was signed 7/1/03, so it has the new chip, not sure how the older version sounded like.

Sound Quality : 10
Setup: Guitar, G&L Lagacy w/Fralin SC pickups to the distortion Pro to either a Penn Pennalizer 50 and a Lexicon Signature 284.
Noise Level: Not bad at all, even at extreme settings.
I'm not trying to sound like anybody in particular, but the distortion is superb.

Reliability : 10
So far I dont see why I could'nt depend on this pedal. It is built very robust.
If I had a gig, I would use without a backup.

Customer Support : 10
So far Fulltone has answered any question within the same day. I'd say thats excellent.

Overall Rating : 8
Price is the only down side to this pedal, but what do you expect from a hand signed pedal.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 08/08/2003 at 01:53pm by Harry
Email: Harryjmic at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : No Opinion
This is a follow up to an earlier review that I posted. I bought this pedal in 2002 and have used it quite a bit but the small adjustment knobs broke apart. I e-mailed Mike Fuller and he said that he had a couple of bad patches of these knobs and said he would fix it for me. I sent him the pedal and he promptly repaired the knobs and also made the pedal compliant with the 2003 version. How cool is that. I had heard that he is tough to deal with but all I can say is that he stands by his product and is totally responsive. I got the pedal back in the span of two weeks and can't wait to try out the new tweaks to the pedal. Thanks again, harry

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $179.00
Submitted 08/07/2003 at 07:08pm by Dan L
Email: guitardan at cox<dot>net

Ease of Use : 7
You have to be patient and do a fair amount of knob tweeking with this bad boy. It reacts differently to different guitar and amp combinations, so spend a little time dialing in the tone for you. The manual is adequate and informative.

Sound Quality : 9
Overall I would rate the sound quality as very, very good. So far I've played thru a Peavey Classic 50 (sounded great thru that amp), a Fender Deluxe Reverb (sounded a little fizzy and loose at first but after I rolled back the mids and highs, and cranked up the bass and saturation, it sounded very sweet and musical) and a Mesa Boogie Dual Caliber 50 head and 2x12 vertical cab loaded with Celestion Vintage 30's (it sounded incredible thru that amp!!!). I still can't believe I'm saying this but the Dist. Pro thru the Boogie's clean channel sounded almost as good as the Boogie's drive channel! To me, that's saying something because the Boogie's drive channel has one of the deepest, roundest, fullest, richest, fattest, sweet and musical sounding distortions I've ever heard. I stood there with the bass player in my band and played the same riff with the Dist. Pro and clean channel - then the Boogie's drive channel (which is loaded with several preamp tubes I might add)...we both agreed the tone was very, very close. I couldn't believe it. I think that pretty much says it all... For a little red box to come close to sounding like the drive channel in a $1000 amplifier is outrageous. I love this pedal! I will give a rating of 9 and not a 10 only because of the results I get with the Deluxe Reverb amp which is not quite as good as with the Peavey or Boogie - but even thru the Deluxe Reverb, it's still the fullest sounding and best sounding distortion pedal I've ever used with it. Puts all the others I've tried to shame. Bravo!

Reliability : No Opinion
Can't comment - haven't had it long enough.

Customer Support : No Opinion
n/a

Overall Rating : 9
I play rock, blues, funk, and jazz fusion. It's a great match for the music I play and for the gear I own (strat, tele, les paul, ES-335...4 Fender tube amps, Marshall JCM-200 TSL60, Boogie DC-5). I would also add that my Fulldrive 2 pedal works extremely well with this box, as does my Boss SD-1 overdrive pedal which I kick in for soaring solos with the Dist. Pro. Been playing 28 years and if I lost this pedal I would check out what's new in the market and if nothing was out there that sounded better, I'd definitely buy another Dist. Pro. Full, fat, rich, smooth distortion that works well for rythym and lead work...very low noise...true bypass switching....I love it. The only negative I can think of is at $199, it is a little pricey - got mine on sale for $179. Thank you Mike Fuller!


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $199.00
Submitted 08/04/2003 at 11:03am by Dale Robison

Ease of Use : 6
Be prepared to spend some time getting used to the tweaks on this pedal. This is an aggressive distortion pedal. Initially I was apprehensive about my purchase. I had to spend a couple of hours with my twin, Les Paul, Telecaster (both stock), Stratocaster (noiseless) & a screwdriver, tweaking the internal pot while comparing Guitars, Amp and pedal setting. I ended up with both internal pots down between 1/8 and 1/4 turn down from factory settings to obtain the tones I wanted. This was just a starting place.

Sound Quality : 7
There are a lot of variables here. First being the amp I use it with. I have an evil twin, a hot rod deluxe, and a Tech 21 Trademark 60.(More on that later) On or off, when alone in the chain, the pedal is completely silent, even on the hot rod's more gain setting (I have lowered the total gain of the pedal with the internal pots). I've owned and gigged the pedal for about 8 months and have been using it for high gain tones (Van Halen, ZZ Top, AC/DC). I use a TS9 reissue for overdrive (SRV, Cheap Trick, Tom Petty). I keep the amp on a pretty clean setting. I recently started using the Hot Rod more often than the Trademark and have rediscovered this pedal. With the Trademark (solid state) the pedal?s distortion took on a grainy quality, which was unpleasant when too high. With the Hot Rod or The Twin this pedal SHINES. The Distortion takes on a more tube like smoothness (silky, creamy, violins, EJ) that is MUCH more natural. Room sizes also seem to affect the pedal, probably more due to changes in amp settings. That is where the tweaking capabilities shine. The "resonance" or low tweak fattens, not necessarily boosts the low end. Too much of this makes the low end muddy or loose. I use it mainly to remove muddiness. Keep in mind I prefer the sound of a combo, not a 4-12. The "voicing" is a mid-range control that acts very much like the "Punch" midrange on the Trademark 60. It adds crunch or midrange distortion and presences to the mids and highs as well as boost. It interacts with "Distortion". It's very useful when you need to cut through the mix of a full band. It also helps me deal with the voicings of different guitars. The "Highs" is just that. It does affect or interact with the "Voicing" and "Distortion". The "Saturation" is a compression type setting. It also adds distortion as you add compression. The compression is dramatically flattening and for me a little bit goes a long way. Finally, The "Volume" and "Distortion" are the 2 large dial and are just what they say they are. All buttons interact with each other.

Examples: Increasing "Saturation" might create sponginess that requires more "Voicing" to maintain presence and attack, while the distortion added by both tweak could be reduced with "Distortion". Or : Reducing ?Saturation? and ?Distortion? might Tighten the sound and allow me to increase ?Resonance? to fatten low end in a tight sterile room.

This pedal likes tube amps and enhances the qualities these amps already have. My Trademark 60 is a fine amp and is very good at what it does, but does not respond to this pedal very well. All 3 guitars listed above maintain their individual characteristics and clean up nicely when the volume is backed off. The Les Paul tries to over saturate a bit, compared to the Fenders, but can be controlled by cutting the guitar volume back to 7 or 8. The Strat is a total pleasure through this pedal. I prefer it on the bridge pickup to help maintain the highs. The Tele really gets dirty and edgy and wants to play disgustingly throaty delta slide through this pedal.

I give it a 7 because of its' ugliness with my solid state amp.

Reliability : 10
I own product from Boss, Ibanez, T.C. Electronics, VooDoo Lab, VHT, MXR, Vox, E.H., Boomerang & Tech 21. I also own a Fulltone Clyde wah. I think Fulltone pedal are the best-built pedals on the market.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't dealt with them(him).

Overall Rating : 8
I play classic rock from the '60s to the 2000's. I have been using this pedal mainly for High Gain stuff like AC/DC, Van Halen, Steppenwolf, etc. As I become more familier with the way it responds I am backing it off and using it for stuff like Black Crows, Santana, even Tom Petty. I agree with a lot of the Rob L. review. There times I feel right in the pocket with this pedal, and times I cringe at the sound when I step on it. I still use a TS9 along side it on a low overdrive setting. To me the DP1 sound great at bedroom volumn, but can get out of control at gig Volumn. If lost or Stolen I would probably get a fulldrive 2 to instead. This pedal is very musical sounds fantastic if you prefer a higher gain to a more subtle overdrive. I don't. I guess that is my biggest problem with it. Although, the more I get it under control, the more I like it. Be prepared to spend time to get the most out of this pedal.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $125
Submitted 07/25/2003 at 08:06pm by Michael Lawrence
Email: badmuddy<at>yahoo dot com

Ease of Use : 10
it's pretty hard to make this pedal sound bad. this is the 2003 model with the updates.

Sound Quality : 10
this is, bar none, THE best bloody dist/overdrive pedal i have EVER heard! my strat & lespaul/sg love this thing! i've been going back & forth between the "brown" & the "blues" settings (& variations thereof) in the manual. they're both great, though i think i'm leanin' towards the blues. i had a sneaky suspicion that the dp-1'd be great, but i didn't realize it'd be this bloody great!!! i am so-o-o stoked that i got it instead of bonzai's fireball 2!!! my sg does a spot on "crossroads!" and the strat sounds like MY bloody strat!! this thing does it all!!! and it feeds back wonderfully. it basically sounds like you've just plugged into an overdrive channel of the best sounding amp on the planet. it's very fluid & articulate at the same time. not only doesn't it glom your guitar's sound, it allows your instrument's textures to be heard, as if you were playing through a clean channel with no distortion. even with the distortion turned full up! all the parameters do useful & usable things; but the "saturation" knob is the key to this pedal's versatility. it ranges from compressed, saggy & fluid legato, to strident, uncompressed definition, or staccato, if you will (great for blues!).

Reliability : No Opinion
just got it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
i've heard it's good. he responds to questions.

Overall Rating : 10
this one's a necessity. i'd have to replace it! a 2 channel version would be perfect. i can't say enough about the dp-1. you usually have to compensate for something or other with a distortion pedal to make it work. not with this one! all the components for a great sound are there, waitng to be dialed in for a particular guitar.it even has a big fat bass WITH definition, if you need it. mike fuller is without a douby, the distortion/overdrive/fuzz/gain king!!!


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $199.00
Submitted 07/04/2003 at 12:33pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 5
Once I adjusted the internal trimmers it was much easier to dial in a decent sound out of this pedal. The manual gives some examples of settings but I never go by these because not everyone is using the same guitar or amps, etc. so as for a guideline I guess the sample setting are ok. The manual itself is pretty straightforward and easy to understand.

Sound Quality : 10
I am using humbucker guitars (Les Paul Standard w/Burstbucker V's and a B.C. Rich Mockingbird with Bill Lawerence PUP's). I used it with my Tech 21 Trademark 60 set on the clean channel. Since im using humbuckers, I did adjust both internal trimmers, cut by 1/8 of a turn. Made a huge difference in clarity. After those adjustements, no matter which way I adjust the rest of the knobs, I got a good sound. Some better than others, but never a lousy sound. I got a great thick lead tone remminisent of Clapton in is live Wheels of Fire days. I also used the Distortion Pro through my 100 watt Marshall super lead with a modded master volume installed and I dialed in a great Gary Moore tone ala Still Got The Blues!! The only other pedal I use with this is my Boss Chorus and my Tech 21 Killer Wail wah wah. The best part of this pedal besides the great tone is the fact that there is no noise comming from it,,no hiss no hum, unbelievable for a "distortion" pedal. Thats another thing,,I wouldnt even call this a distortion pedal. I mean, you can get a distorted tone if you crank up the distortion knob and the saturation knob. I like to think of this pedal as a Class A preamp/overdrive pedal.

Reliability : 10
So far so good...Ive only had it a month and not a problem with it at all. Used it for gigs and I am not worried about this pedal crapping out on me,,just feels like its built solid. Im giving it a 10 rating, I have that much faith in it, and I figure if anything was to go wrong it would have went wrong already.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to deal with them so....

Overall Rating : 10
I play rock from the 60's to the 80's and this pedal can cover it all. Ive been playing for 30 years and had my share of distortion/overdrive pedals, and each one was good in their own right. The closest I can say this pedal comes to is the Boss OD 1? (yellow pedal). The Fulltone has better definition to it and clarity in my opinion. I love everything about this pedal, like I said, once I got the Trimmers adjusted. I originally set out to buy a Radial Tonebone, but they arent available in my area yet, so I tried this pedal and figured I would give it a shot. When the Tonebone does come around I will be checking that one out and then decide which to keep. (Ive heard great things about the Tonebone also). All in all, I have read alot of reviews here saying it sounds too fuzzy, cant get the sound I want, etc. I say spend some time with it, thats half the fun of a pedal to create new sounds and finding your own sound. Your paying for a quality pedal, treat it like one. If you want to settle for something that you can just plug in and go with..all I can say is you get what you pay for.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $149.99 used
Submitted 06/20/2003 at 12:11pm by David Kalmbach
Email: SupernovaN2310 at aol<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
Well as soon as i got this thing outta the box it was easy to get a great tone. The manual gives nice settings. The brown sound is exceptionally good, i adjusted it a lil bit for more mids and less bass, but it was easy. The pedal was a lot easier to tweak than some made it out to be. Volume, distortion, bass, mids, highs, and saturation. Plus two pots, but i didnt touch those.

Sound Quality : 10
*DISCLAIMER* THIS PEDAL WAS NOT MADE TO SOUND LIKE METALLICA, PANTERA, AND THE LIKE. DO NOT LET THE NAME OF THE PEDAL CONFUSE YOU.

I use this with my Gibson Les Paul, a boss tremolo pedal, vox wah, and marshall jcm2000 DSL. I got it cos i actually sold my peavey delta blues and plan on getting a fender blues junior. For the fender i wanted a pedal that'd give me a nice blues tone. Something smooth, creamy, and maybe even fuzzy.

Well, when i put my amp up for sale at the local shop i saw this pedal on sale, used. Only $150 opposed to the $219 price for it new. I planned on getting the 69 pedal but i thought i'd try this out. I actually didnt even bother and i just bought it though. I came home with it, plugged it in, dialed in the brown sound and was blown away. I went through many pedals including: Boss metal zone, Boss blues driver, MXR distortion +, Boss DS1, Ibanez smashbox, Big Muff USA, Big Muff russia, POD, Zoom 505II, Ibanez DS7 (i think that was the name) and i think a few others and after all of them i was FED UP with pedals. I thought they sounded like crap. But this was is FANTASTIC. I think as soon as i get my fender, the marshall will take a well earned break.

The tone in this pedal is superb. It has a lot of low end, which people complain about, but a lot of pedals lack. I just turn the bass down on the pedal =) The tone is SO smooth, and so creamy. Its like the Big muff... but good! You can get a variety of tones. Its great for blues. YOu can get a subtle drive goin on that still has its fair share of sustain. This pedal is amazing.

Reliability : 7
I dont plan on it breaking but i notice that the knobs don't look all that sturdy. The previous owner took a little chip out of the voicing (highs) knob. But it's ok. I dont think it'll break but i'm pretty sure it wont take the punishment a boss pedal would though.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with them so far. But from what i hear they're good. I trust them right now. I wont rate it though, seeing as though i've never had to contact them. As of yet at least.

Overall Rating : 10
I play mostly brit rock (oasis), newer more experimental rock (interpol, black rebel motorcycle club), but my passion is still definitely the blues and funk. I'm also currently trying to learn jazz and get good at it. For $150 this pedal gets a for overall rating. For $219 i give it a 9. I mean, it has SUPERB tone and is absolutely wonderful, but i dont really believe in paying $219 for any pedal... If it were stolen though, i think i'd have to buy a new one cos its so great =) If you like the blues, or the Clapton sound when he was in cream, get this. If you dont, you should at least try it. It just might have the tone you've been looking for.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $190.00
Submitted 06/19/2003 at 03:03pm by Rob L.

Ease of Use : 6
No two ways around it - this is a deep pedal with lots of variables in regards to tone. Six knobs, the two most obvious being Volume and Distortion, and four mini knobs that alter the entire character of the pedal's sound. I've gigged this pedal quite a bit and have had moments of total bliss as well as moments of panic. In a word: Versatile.

Sound Quality : 8
I mostly play my PRS McCarty into Clyde Deluxe>FullDrive II>D Pro>block logo Phase 90>Line 6 DM-4 and out into my Hot-Rod Deville. I can get all kinds of killer old-school rock tones, trippy clean sounds and nice bluesy bark with this set-up. I consider the D-Pro to be somewhat of a loose cannon within my set-up. The first six months spent with it were very inconsistent. I was gigging it a lot in an improv setting so finding the appropriate time to use it was taxing in and of itself. I always had the volume knob set very low because of what I perceived at the time to be the pedal's enormous output level. Recently, I've allowed myself more tweak-time with the pedal and have come up with a few solutions for the out-of-hand output level. Simply by rolling off the Voicing knob quite a bit, I was able to achieve a much smoother, more predictable sound. The drawback to this is that I lost some definition because the Voicing knob is basically a highly reactive midrange/distortion control and by cutting out my mids, I lost some of my ability to cut through the band. All of this goes to say that yes, this is one bad mamma-jamma, but it takes a bit of time before all the controls start to make sense. I've finally reached the point with this pedal that I can reach for the exact knob I need when I'm playing and I need to make a change.
By itself, it's not a very noisy box, compared to a lot of other distortions I've used. With the Fulldrive boosted and feeding it, and the wah-wah on, let's just say the band better be really cooking or else you'll hear that lovely windstorm whitenoise loud and clear.
The bottom line here is that this is one of the best, and most confounding distortion pedals out there. I've had moments where I honestly felt like my Hot-Rod Deville transformed into a cranked 100 watt Plexi. That cool crispy, sparkly, creamy, dynamic high-end was there in spades. I've also had moments where I've regretted turning the thing on. It's almost as if this thing has got a personality of its own. That's why I keep my faith in this pedal. With patience and insight, it's unbelievable. If you expect to unpack it and sound amazing right away....I suppose it's possible, that's just not how it worked out for me.

Reliability : 10
Hasn't let me down in fifty or more gigs. Fulltone stuff is rock-solid inside and out. Very worthy of pedal board space.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to contact Fulltone before. No opinion here.

Overall Rating : 9
For my rock band, this thing is really great. Classic sounds, not overly processed, highly dynamic (I forgot to mention above that the guitar's volume knob can be used to REALLY clean this guy up) and cool to look down at when you're rocking out.
I really love how I can turn it on at the beginning of a jam with my guitar volume set very low, play rhythm and cut through just fine, then when the time is right, dime the guitar and it's all there - feedback, sustain, crunch, grind - attitude. Really very satisfying. It can be a harsh mistress, but the time spent with this one is well worth it. I really like the way the Saturation knob adds sag and compression - very cool for a modern lead sound, the Resonance knob really kicks some oomph into my open-back combo, and the Highs can be made to scream and react in a very organic way to my playing. Just writing this has given me even more insight into why I got this pedal in the first place - it's versatile, unique and future-proof. Great tone will never go out of style.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $150
Submitted 05/30/2003 at 09:54pm by Davison

Ease of Use : 10
Yes, contrary to so many of those with massive ADD who haven't the patience so turn a few nobs, this pedal is super fine and rather easy to dial in not one, but many great sounds. I am clueless why anyone thinks this is hard to use. Learning to play a guitar, now thats hard. But turning a nob here and another one there, that's the fun of owning a great pedal. Experimenting with with it's capabilities. WIth this pedal, the possibilities are endless.

Sound Quality : 10
My rig includes the following:
64 Strat or 76 Les Paul BB > Menatone Red Snapper > Ibanez TS-9 > Distortion Pro > Keely Moded Blues Driver > DOD Flashback Fuzz > Boss OC2 >Qtron+ > MXR Script Logo Dyna Comp > Boss DD3 Delay > SweetSound Mojo Vibe > Ibanez FL 301 DX Flanger > Digitech WH-1 > Fulltone Fat Tone > BOss GE-7 > Ernie Ball Volume Pedal > Tone man moded Vox AC -15.

I'm not going to get all technical here or break this sound down molecule by molecule. There are plenty of gearheads who have done a great job here below. Simply, for my Strat, I keep the pickup in the lead position and dial in the VOlumne at 2-3:00 Distorition on 12:00
REsonance at 11:00 VOicing at 1:00 Highs at 2:00 Saturation on 12:00 and I get busy playing. As for trying to cop the sound of other artists . . . guys, come one nothing can do that for you. Their sound is mostly in their fingers and then , when you factor in their chain, their guitar, their amp and then the recording equipment itself, you will drive yourself crazy if you expect this little red box will make you sound like Frampton or Eric Johnson. Instead, try doing what they do, sound like yourself.

Reliability : 10
Box look damn dependable. Built very sturdy. I will sit in my pedalboard and I will step on it once in a while. I would imagine it can take that abuse forever.

Customer Support : 10
Here's what I can vouch for. Mike Fuller will answer your email in a timely fashion and deal with you with utmost respect provided you have human expectations from him. Those of you who expect him to be your best friend or shower you with the love and attention you didn't get as a child will of course be disapointed. So get over it. All Mikes love apprantly goes into his pedals where they belong is my guess. In any event, he answered every single one of my emails with the same if not slightly more respect than I showed him. So if you ask me, I say he's a class act all the way

Overall Rating : 10
I play rock. 60's seventies, 80's and 90's. I sometimes play music from the last five years but that's when I forget all the theory I've ever learned and trash all the tone I've spent a lifetime perfecting and just thrash out 3 chords over and over again. This generalization of course exclude certain various artists like Beck, Marilyn Manson, U2, some great Rap artists and few select others. But the rest of the crap out there - it's like no one has studied the masters.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $160 used
Submitted 05/16/2003 at 08:00pm by Alan J.

Ease of Use : 6
There's a lot knobs on this thing, and they interact, so its takes quite a while to figure out. I re-labelled the little knobs "low scoop" "mid bump" "high scoop" and "compression". Also the 2 internal trim pots make a heck of a difference. I call them "harmonics" and "cream".

Sound Quality : 10
Tweak the two internal trimpots ! They make all the difference.

You can dial-in from a reasonably farty distortion, to a resonably mild overdrive. Its musical with all dials at zero, or all dials dimed. In all settings, it has very "in your face" dynamics. So the creamy settings still have a lot of picking edge.

In all settings, you can clearly hear all the notes of the weirdest chords. On my Strato (with noiseless pu's) I can still hear all 5 pu settings distinctly. With a compressor in the loop, te note clarity is staggering.


It really keeps my guitar's dynamics intact. This can be pretty intimidating when set to high gain, and high volume. It doesn't compress the sound. Which is why I think its well suited in front of a saturated amp, or with a compressor in the circuit.


Sequence of effect is very important. These non-bufferered pedals behave very differently depending on the order. This affects noise and tone.

It really brought my Fulltone Deja Vibe to life. I also like adding compressor in the loop for some tones, especially when I'm playing with my amp at lower volume (saturation). I also like to have at least one buffered pedal in the loop to keep the signal stong and bright


Reliability : 9
From what I hear, Mr. Fulltone is a nice guy.

But the little knobs shattered with just esktop use. The little white dot markers were fit too tight. I epoxied the pieces back together.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No need yet.

Overall Rating : 9
Tweak the two internal trimpots ! They make all the difference.

Wish it also had a compression knob. The "in your face" sound is great some of the time, but not always.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: 380,000 (\)
Submitted 04/13/2003 at 05:57pm by Jason Roh,,Seoul, Korea
Email: charvel<at>dreamwiz dot com

Ease of Use : 5
It is not easy to use

Sound Quality : 9
Hamer/Kramer/Gibson57/charvel -> SparkleDrive -> Distortion Pro
-> TC Chorus/flanger -> Boss DD3 -> JTM45
I play 80's rock mostly,,

.Little bit noisy..but distortion always happen
.Four mini nobs ARE the key of this product.
-> Solos & Rhythms..excellant performance!
.I've tried many many distortions for recording reasons and..
.I'll bet this one works

Reliability : 3
You better watch out~
4 little nobs are little bit fragile..
My one of 4's is already broken..
Can fulltone members repair this one?

Customer Support : No Opinion
No comment

Overall Rating : 9
It matches really well with any humbuckers for bridge..
If you're fender kind(singles),,,I wouldn't recommend this one..
It especially works well with overdrives..(Mine is SparkleDrive,,
and they are the best friends..^^)


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $200.00
Submitted 04/08/2003 at 10:42am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
pretty easy to use. nothing facy.

Sound Quality : 1
i dodnt like it. i wanted to really like this product. i bought based on other eviews. it doent suit me atll. this distortion doent scream. i wanted a distortion that wansnt a metal distrotion and that it would clean up nicely when i rolled back my volumes knod. like jimmy poge. well this thing doesnt get me there the leads ounf lfta. ive tried it with everything from a les pual with duncans a fender strat, an esp with emgs another les paul with emgs, it doent sound good with anything. the marshall jackhammer or the zoom hype lead blow this thing out of the water. even the guys in my band said i was ripped of this blan distortion unit. this is overpriced junk.

Reliability : No Opinion
dont know ill probably give it away or sell it. dont care it sucks. i wasted my money on this.

Customer Support : No Opinion
i hear the mike fuller takes great pride with his pedals but man, i really thought this thing would be killer, what a dissapointment. i dont know i havent written to mike about it nor i dont think i will.

Overall Rating : 2
if you want killer distortion go with the marshall jackhemmer, the boss ds-1, the zoom hyper lead or tri metal the mesa v-twin or the radial tonebone, those pedals deliver the goods. the distortion pro just seems very bland there is absolutely no tine in this thing.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $225.00
Submitted 02/08/2003 at 02:32pm by Butch
Email: Butchand TracyRdr<at>aol dot com

Ease of Use : 7
I'm not very patient, but it took several practice sessions to learn how to get a decent sound out of it. Hang in there and turn every knob and you will finally dial in the sound you are looking for.

Sound Quality : 9
I play mostly through a Bruno Underground 30 and use a custom shop 54 strat with Rio Grande pickups. In higher distortion settings this setup seems to bottom out my celestion blues so I have to bring the distortion or saturation knobs down a bit. This pedal seems to like the combination of my Dr Z Rt 66 and PRS McCarty because it sounds much better through these two. Overall I'm not really excited about this pedal even though I own seven Fulltone pedals and like all of them more than this pedal. I just couldn't seem to get the sound that I was looking for out of this pedal.

Reliability : 10
You can definently depend on any Fulltone pedal. I've never had a problem with this pedal. I always have a backup because you never know what will happen.

Customer Support : 9
I've only had one problem in three years of playing Fulltone efects. I had a switch go out on my Clyde Wah and had to call because the turn around time was getting long. Mike Fuller was very nice on the phone and apologized for the delay and got it back promptly.

Overall Rating : 8
I play Christian music with a 150 voice choir and we do a variety of music. Praise and worship, Black gospel, and contemporary with other styles mixed in. I've been playing about 15 years and my setup is as follows: 54 custom shop RI strat and PRS McCarty with only Fulltone pedals. Clyde wah>SoulBender>FatBoost>DistPro>FulldriveII>ChoralFlange>Bruno Underground 30 Reverb Head with 2x12 Celestion Blues also Dr Z Rt 66. If this pedal was stolen I probably wouldn't replace it because my other pedals would get me through just fine. I bought this pedal because of the great reviews that I read. I guess we all have different taste.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $109 used
Submitted 01/17/2003 at 11:48am by Anonymous
Email: kayagum at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
6 dials, pretty straight forward. Nothing not to understand. Actually prefer the tone dials to be smaller, so that they won't get knocked around during a show.

Sound Quality : 9
The manual says "The Distortion Pro is designed to cover that huge gap between Overdrive and out-and-out Fuzz." Not only do I agree with this personally, but I think the subpar ratings and comments ignore that first sentence of the manual. This will not make you sound like neither Eric Johnson nor System of the Down. It will make you sound like just about any indie band in the last 20 years, depending on how you set the dials.

The tone dials are uniquely useful. Going left to right (below the volume and distortion level big dials):

Resonance: shapes bass frequencies. I leave it all the way on. I hate pedals that chop the lows- this dial fixes it. I can even use it on my baritone and bass.

Voicing: mids. Frequency dependent for distortion level.

Highs: highs. Has frequency overlap with Voicing.

Saturation: this is the most interesting dial. Has both compression and sponginess features. Although some may describe it as a power amp tube simulator (the compression part for sure), I think of it as adding extra speaker thump as well (a bit more give, a bit more air) A great cure for single-coil brittleness.

I find this to be a very versatile pedal, with very useful in-between tones, and yet it's more refined (in a good way). Doesn't have the bright harsh spikes of say a RAT or MXR Distortion +; I think this makes this pedal really great on single coils, but maybe less than ideal for humbuckers. Not a surprise since Mike is a Strat player. I think this is a great pedal for rock rhythm playing.

I haven't tried direct recording with this yet, but I'm anxious to try. Compared to my SIB Varidrive, it sounds a bit more flat (dimensionally speaking), but that may be a good thing for direct recording or smaller amps. I still think the Varidrive is the bomb for live gigs. Haven't tried both together.

The sustain is not as long as many other pedals, which I think is a great feature for controlled sounds on recording. I'm planning on using my Maxon compressor anyway for my live rig, and a boost pedal in front of it sounds great for leads.

Reliability : 10
Perfectly solid (got it used). Can't imagine problems with it.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
See above for my comments. A wonderful pedal- not mind-blowing, but a very solid workhorse with just enough refinement to class up standard rock tones.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $219
Submitted 01/15/2003 at 06:52pm by paul
Email: palway<at>earthlink dot net

Ease of Use : 9
Lot's of options being made the way it is. I waited to review it until I used different guitars and amps. Manual is useful

Sound Quality : 10
my setup - EC strat (1989) with PUs replaced with early 60s regular old strat PUs >> Carl Martin compressor>>>distortion>>> tape echo>>>Gibson GA15RV on the triode (6 watts) setting. I am thrilled with it - finally a distortion unit that treats a strat bridge PU right. - very fat tubelike character - more tubelike than tube distortions I' ve used (Phatman, real tube, etc.) It does AC/DC great. With the distortion set all the way minimum it's a great blues breakup. My favorite settings are with the distortion and saturation set much lower than the manual which makes sense because my amp is 6 watts and already on the edge of breakup. With my 40 watt vibrolux the setting are more like the manual.

Reliability : No Opinion
don't know yet but seems solid.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Fulltone has a good reputation - I'm not concerned

Overall Rating : 10
I've played 35 years and own way too much stuuf (and hope to get more) The bottom line is that I did it right. I bought a disortion unit that is made by a stratocaster guy. This is perfect with my strat and both teles I have. It is useless with my big rockabilly box with P-90s but that's ok by me. I use my TS 10 with that box. I play RnB, rockabilly, pop-rock and funk. Most distortion boxes sound too "metal " like. This one is divine. I still use my TS10 but for a different sound. I would certainly replace it.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $219
Submitted 01/11/2003 at 09:57am by Justin Brooks
Email: Mrjb5 at aol<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
I love the manual for this pedal. It gives you several setting to choose from pending on your style of music. It also gives you a record keeper to write down any discoveries in tweaking the pedal that you may find.

Sound Quality : 10
I currently use an American Thinline Tele running through a Fender '72 Vibrolux Reverb Amp. Playing rock, funk, and blues, I always used to use a Boss Overdrive pedal for the really meaty portions of the song and for a solo. Although I was pleased with it, it didn't have the kick I was looking for. I just got a Distortion Pro and from the moment I plugged it in I've loved it. I use the blues setting that the manual gives, with it tweaked ever so slightly. This pedal has real bite to it that cuts through incredibly. It has a very warm tone that does well for a single-coil Tele. Although it is the best overdrive pedal I've ever heard, I have trouble with string clarity. So for the more driving parts of a song I use the DPro, but if i need more clarity on the strings, I will use the Boss. Overall, it's a great pedal and I highly recommend it, especially for Tele players.

Reliability : 10
It has been dependable so far.

Customer Support : 7

Overall Rating : 10


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $150.00 used
Submitted 01/07/2003 at 07:03pm by Skip
Email: bhernandez at clearsource<dot>net

Ease of Use : 9
When I got the pedal,I was very disappointed in it. I couldn't get a good sound at all no matter how much I tinkered with it. I was feeling like I was cheated out of my money and was ready to agree with some of the other reviews that is was just some overated muddy sounding fuzz box with no tone merit at all.But, I looked at the manual and it said that there are 2 trim pots in the back of the pedal. Trim pot #1 says that if you have a guitar with humbuckers that it can be adjusted Clockwise no more that 1/8 turn to cut back on some of the distortion. Trim pot # 2 is supposed to be left alone and not messed with cause it's set how the factory says it should be. Well,after I adjusted both Trim pots # 1 & 2 clockwise 1/8 of a turn, it made all the difference in the world. More about this in the sound quality section.Ease of use before trim pot adjustment is a 3. Ease of use after trim post adjustment - 9

Sound Quality : 9
I'm using a 86' Mesa Boogie Mk III fully loaded simul-class and using it in Class A mode. I also have a Mk IIc+ Bubinga/wicker simul-class combo fully loaded. I use a Tom Anderson Hollow Drop Top Classic S/S/H . My effects chain is as follows Boss Ft-2>Boss TU-2>Boss CS-1>Boss CS-2>Boss Bd-2>Boss Od-1>Boss Od-3>Nobels Odr-1>Mxr Dist. II>Barber Direct Drive> Fulltone Dp-1>Nobels Pre-1 Booter> Boss Ns-2>Arion SCH-1 Chorus>Boss CE-5>Ibanez AD-9>Boss DD-3>BossDD-3>Boss PS-3. All patch cables are George L's and Monster Cables and this effect chane goes into one of the Boogies. I set the Boogies up for a nice clean tone with just a touch of onboard reverb.As I said up above the pedal was not happening until both trim pots were adjusted. For the record ,I tried the pedal by itself before I put it in the chain.One I did the trim pot adjustment, all the clarity,articulation and transperency that I had been looking for was there.The knobs still interactive and changing the gain or saturation may force you to make adjustments in the other knobs to get the desired tone your after,but you don't have to hunt very long to get a great tone. I was able with tweaking to get into the Van Halen,Eric Johnson,Michael Schenker and even some May,but not the exact sound they have,because there are to many other variables involved strings,guitar,amp and other effects in their chains that all make up their tones.But all these root tones as well as many others are in this pedal.One real important part of any pedal getting a fair chance at proving what it can do is starting out with a guitar in very good working and playing conditon and if you are using pedals for all your overdrives and distortions,a good clean,clear articulate tone from your amp. It must start here,in order to give a pedal a fair chance. I did this with the Dist. Pro and I never gave up on it,and it payed off.

Reliability : 9
I have not had it long enough to tell,but it looks like it built very solid and I probably would not need a back up for it.

Customer Support : 10
I e-mailed Mike about my Trim pot adjustments.I told him that I've seen way too many brand new Dist. Pro's being sold for cheap on E-bay and HC.I mentioned that probably almost all of those guys never adjusted both trim pots,and therefore thought the pedal sucked. He emailed me back in a few hours and said the new Dist. Pro's have the pots cut back and players are alot happier.Mike does really care about what players think of his products and wants them to be satisfied. If you have any problems e-mail Mike. He will return your e-mail

Overall Rating : 10
I play in a Country variety band.I play old and new country classic and new rock,funk,rap and Tejano music. I have to be able to cover all the bases. This pedal is able is able to cover alot of ground. With pot adjustment I can go from light overdrive to singing lead tone.I've been playing live for 25 years staight with only 5 months off when I changed from rock music to country variety. I also own a 72'Fender Deluxe Tele,77'Fender Strat,77'Gibson Explorer,82'Jimmy Wallace 59'reissue quilted sunburst,91'52'reissue Tele,96'50's reissue Fender Strat,and my live giging guitar. 99' Tom Anderson Hollow Drop Top Classic.If it were stolen I would purchase it again.As a matter of fact,I'm probably going to buy a few of HC or E-bay who don't know what they're getting rid of.I love the tonal options available on this pedal. My favorite feature is the saturation knob. You can dial nice compessed tone to taste.I compared this to the Barber Direct Drive and it was more versitile than the Barber.On the light side the Barber was more transparent,although the Dist Pro was transparent on the light side,it just wasn't as much as the Barber.Now on the heavier side,the Barber couldn't get the singing saturated lead tone the Pro could. I also compared the Pro also to my Mxr Dist. II pedal.To my surprise neither the Barber or the Pro were as transparent on the light side as the Mxr.Neither the Barber or the Pro could match its almost clean boost transparncy.But on the other side of the spectrum,neither the Barber or the Mxr could keep up with the Pro's singing saturated lead tone.I bought this pedal for this reason.Thats the effect I was after.The fact that I can get so many other useable tones is just a plus. I don't consider myself a pedal snob and I don't have to have the most expensive pedals to feel like I'm getting the best tone. I use a lot of Boss pedals and also use an Arion chorus and also a Nobels overdrive along with my Mxr,Barber and Dist Pro.Some are inexpensive and some cost some good bucks,but they are "tone tools" to be used in the right mix with the guitar and an good amp. The group I play in has opened up for just about every big name country act in the country. I've had a chance to hang out and talk about equipment and tone with some of the best pickers around.The thing that I've noticed is that most of them just use good old tube amps alot of them use boss pedals with choice high end pedals mixed in. In talking to these guys they say their sound starts with a good guitar into a good sounding amp,but they say that the best guys tone comes from their fingers. The effects only help enhance the basic tone.Without the proper fundamental tonal foundation the pedals no matter what they cost mean nothing. Case in point,is when we opened for George Jones. The guitar player played an old silver faced twin and was using an old 60's or 70's strat,and only had a Boss cs-2,Boss Dm-2 and he had just about the best tone I've heard live of all the pickers we've opened up for.I've learned from this tonal enlightment that you have to know how to properly use the tools you have to get good tone. This pedal is alot like this. There is an Ambosia of tone lurking inside the pedal waiting to nourish the tone hungry explorers in all of us.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/25/2002 at 08:36am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : No Opinion

Sound Quality : 10
This is a follow-up to my previous post. I posted about running the DP through my blues junior and my boogie. Well, I am very hesitant about giving 10's but, I just started playing the DP through a stock '65 Twin Reverb (reissue) and this thing sounds every bit as good as anything I've heard (recorded or live).

I am learning a few lessons here, which is good.

First, the '65 Twin is an fantastic amp and the DP sounds just a great.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
Overall, this pedal is very particular to the amp-guitar set-up. If you find the right combination of instrument and amp, this pedal will satisfy you for a long time.


Product: Fulltone Distortion Pro
Price Paid: US $195
Submitted 12/17/2002 at 09:42am by Rich S.
Email: sxdx99 at comcast<dot>net

Ease of Use : 9
Really, its not brain surgery, but you just need to understand which knob does what.

Sound Quality : 8
Guitar: Les Paul Classic - 500t bridge PU and 498T Neck PU
Amps: Mesa Rect-o-Verb thru a 2x12 Rectifier Cab, Fender Blues Junior

Using this pedal straight out of the box I was a little disappointed. My first test is always with the Blues Junior amp. It's not the greatest sounding amp, so my theory is if a pedal sounds good through that, then it usually sounds good through my Boogie.

The DP sounded very chunky (in a bad way) and rough. Not very musical to my ears. I played around with a number of different setting over a number of days. The distortion from the Blues Junior was better than the pedal! At this point, I'm getting very cynical about all of these perfect 10 reviews I've read previous to my purchase.

Anyway, I then tried the DP with my Boogie. The pedal sounded better than through the BJ, but it did not knock me off my feet. To me, this was an average pedal with a very high price tag.

A little frustrated I decided to tweak the internal trimmers. I lowered the gain of the internal trim pot approx. 1/4 turn (lowering the gain) and the pedal sounded MUCH better.

This pedal now sounds a lot smoother, BUT it has to be played at a relatively loud volume. When played loud, this pedal is a 8+. At lower volumes, I'd give it a 6, maybe a 7. When played through the BJ, the pedal still gets a 6.

I did try a number of distortion pedals. The BOSS Mega Distortion actually sounded better. I could get every sound of the Distortion Pro out of the BOSS pedal and more. Plus the BOSS was a lot smoother sounding. The big drawback to the Boss pedal was at loud volumes. It started to get a *tingy* metallic hiss type sound.

The lower notes still seem less defined, a tad muddy.

Reliability : No Opinion
Looks like it is well constructed.

Customer Support : 10
Sent one email, responded within the hour (after his normal business hours).

Overall Rating : 7
I once read a post somewhere in here to be weary of any review that gives all 10's and uses words like "greatest ever", etc... I agree totally with that poster. Some of the comment border on the ridiculous. There are a lot of those reviews for this pedal. I believe some of that comes from folks who spend large $$$ on a pedal trying to justify thier purchase. Others, well, it is probably true to thier ears.

Overall, the Fulltone Distortion Pro is a very good distortion pedal. In my opinion, at loud volumes, it beats the likes of Maxon DSII, MXR D+, and Boss mega Distortion.

Really, if you plan to purchase, do yourself a favor and seek a dealer with a return policy. Try it out with your own gear and judge from there. (By the way, in the music store this pedal sounded like a "10" through a Reissue '59 bassman!)

This is a subjective point of view. Each owner must judge to thier own ears. Hope this helps somebody.

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