Fulltone Full-Drive 2
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Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $200
Submitted 11/16/2004
at 02:26pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
7
Extremely Easy to use other than trying to match up sound levels of the 2 different settings (normal and "boost"). To get a nice drive, the volume increase was hard for me to overcome.
Sound Quality
:
8
The sound quality is pretty good (certainly, however, not the end-all I was looking for. I originally hoped to replace 2 pedals with this one, and ultimately gave up. The tone gets lost in a mix (in my opinion that is), and the sound of a good 808 tube screamer is better (once again in my opinion. I will say it does a good job of emulating the sound of my amps overdrive with very little coloring which I guess is something to be proud of.
Reliability
:
9
Absolutely no problems. Built very solid.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
8
I would not replace the FD2 if stolen since I feel there are better pedals out there for the price paid. Also, if you cannot fully utilize BOTH of it's channels (which I had trouble doing) it's a waste of space. Better to just have 2 best of breed pedals.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $150
Submitted 10/13/2004
at 12:04am
by Anonymous
Email: kuma at znet<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
Pretty simple to operate. The typical controls for an OD pedal; OD level , volume, and tone, with the added comp cut and flat mid (if you have the newer model) and a separate footswitchable boost. A very easy to use set up for 3 quickly selectable sounds, clean, slight OD, and boosted OD.
Sound Quality
:
10
I have been using the FD for about 10 years with Dr Z Maz 38 Studio, Maz 18 Jr, Rivera M60, & Rivera R55-112.. Sounds excellent throught the M60 and both of the Dr Z amps, I don't like the sound through the R55. I play a PRS Custom 22 and an American Strat Deluxe.. the pedal interacts nicely with both the single coil and humbuckers. The pedal is very quiet on the settings I typically use, vol-1:00, tone-2:00, overdrive-8:00, boost-between 9:00 and noon.
Reliability
:
10
I had to fix a solder joint on one of the jacks just before a gig, not a big deal. I do have a back up - for now (see support section)
Customer Support
:
7
I did have an experience with Fulltone and my original FD. I was not getting the typical great sound out of the unit so I thought I's simply e-mail Fulltone and see if they had any suggestions. I did not receive any suggestions by rather a note that said fill out the form and send the pedal in. So I did. The communication was practically non existant from Fulltone so I ended up buying a second FD for a recording session (they did not even acknoledge receipt for over a week). I did end up getting a note that siad the pedal would be shipped out on such and such a date... after giving more than sufficient time for shipping I contacted Fulltone again. The apologized for not shipping the pedal. Aparently an oversight. So I receive the pedal.. on the paperwork was written, pedal checks out ok, check power supply, chack cables, check EARS!. I was more than a bit annoyed and very suprised that they would insult a customer by suggesting I cannot hear. So I faxed Mike with the story and my feelings. He responded and basically felt I interrupted their production causing them to loose money because the tech had to stop making the $999 TTE to check out my pedal. We did at least agree that this whole ordeal might have been avoided with some info either on the web site or via the tech e-mail.
Overall Rating
:
8
I play mostly a mixture of rock, blues, and funk and this pedal is killer. My setup is: PRS/Strat - COT50 - Clyde Deluxe wah - FD2 - Earnie Ball Vol Jr - Maxon AD80 delay - Mojo Vibe - Aria DMX10 flanger - Boss CE2 chorus - Amp. I would replace if lost.. oh yeah I already did that.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $150 used
Submitted 09/17/2004
at 03:19pm
by Anonymous
Email: jat14<at>humboldt dot edu
Ease of Use
:
9
I loved the features and the variations possible; two chanels to select from is really nice. Cudos for that. On paper, the Fulldrive II is the perfect overdrive and offers a tremendous amount of flexibility. But in the process of moving from idea to reality, things happen, and that is where I found problems.
Sound Quality
:
6
Less than spectacular. One reviewer mentioned that the unit is picky with amps - maybe so. My analogman Tubescreamer has a much clearer sound. I have heard there are mods that will bring out the mid-range on these units, take away that muddy slog. But before I could do anything about the sound, one of the switches went south. Okay, no biggy. I contact Fulltone and someone tells me that my year was a bad year for switches and that I can order a new one. Great. The sound problem never really improved. But this did begin a longlasting relationship between my soldering gun, both my Fulltone pedals, and sporadic emails to Fulltone.
Reliability
:
5
Both my Fulltone pedals failed within six months. Switches. My Clyde wah emits a high pitched squeal that aliens can hear in deep space. Dogs gather at my gigs. I have the replacement switch, but I can't get Fulltone to replay to my emails, so I don't know what wires go where (the two switches are different). That leads my review into the bizzaro world of Fulltone Customer Service
Customer Support
:
3
After I fixed the bad switch on my Fulldrive II, the other one went out. I had a pretty good experience fixing this factory problem, in terms of Fulltone and helpfulness. When I had to do it again a short time later, I wondered why they didn't advise me to change both switches at the same time? But oh well, I fixed it then started working on the sound problem. When my Clyde took a shit soon after, it was a different story (still without end). But that is another review. Bottom line: contact with Fulltone can be okay or it can suck, depending on what you want and what your problem is. My problem was their problem (factory switch was a loser), and when I think about it in those terms I start to cringe at all the people who report bad dealings with Fulltone customer service. I look at the Fulltone website and gaze at all the georgeous guitars shown in the Fulltone museum (Mikes?). When I think that perhaps some were bought with my money I want to ask Mike how that equipment would sound through my sqealing broken Clyde and muddy Fulldrive II.
Overall Rating
:
7
This is the first review I have ever posted (this and the Clyde review. Check that one out if want to hear a true rant). I don't use either of my Fulltone pedals anymore. There are others that do it better for me. I need to say that I think there a ton of people who have these pedals and love them, trouble free. They can leave glowing reviews. I can't: my pedals gave me grief, and Fulltone CS is still giving me grief. I just want out.
I used to be a true believer in Fulltone. But that eroded when I ended up spending more time inside my pedals than out. If you can't be personable to your customers (especially when they call about your mistakes), hire someone who will.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $160.00 used
Submitted 09/10/2004
at 08:10pm
by C Thornburg
Ease of Use
:
10
Mine is the newer version with the toggle switch for vintage, FM & Comp Cut settings. To be honest, I'm not sure that you can make a bad tone with this thing. Point the knobs anywhere and magic seems to happen. There is clarity in every setting. Great for chords and soloing with the boost on.
Sound Quality
:
10
I play Rickenbacker 330s thru a Fender 65 Super Reverb. The chain goes Vox Wah, FD2 and DOD DFX91 Delay. The Full Drive has 6 different tones. The Vintage mode is something along the lines of a very beautiful Marshall overdrive with a sweet boost for solos. The FM setting starts with that ultra clear "Sonic Youth/Swervedriver" type of overdirve where all the notes of big chords come through. Then the boost on FM gives you... well... more! The there is the Comp Cut. Starts with wonderful clanging yet transparent overdrive and then the boost switch procedes to destroy your speakers for something that is truly special. I've never heard a pedal so completely take over the speakers of an amp. The Buddah is in there somewhere. Honest. I tried a bunch of different pedals to get good overdirve out of my guitars and amp. This is the only one that has been jaw droppingly satisfying. Everything else is either too muddy or too crispy. There is substitute for hand bilt mojo, great components and dedicated vision.
Reliability
:
10
I bought mine used and it seems to be holding up just great. Fulltone is an A+ compnay to deal with that care about its product and artists.
Customer Support
:
10
They reeeeeelly care!
Overall Rating
:
10
If you are looking for more extreme types of Fuzz I would recommend some of the other Fulltone pedals. For classic tones and the ability to let your guitar and amp work with the overdrive I'm not sure that you can buy a better pedal. Again, there are no bad tones in this thing. Worth every penny and I wished I could of had one 10 years ago.The Vibe of the tone and the clarity of dense chords through the overdrive make this a unique pedal in a land of wannabes.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $200 used
Submitted 09/09/2004
at 01:15pm
by Brad Van - www.droidsattack.com
Email: droidsattack at aol<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
7
Easy enough. Four knobs, and it's very easy to adjust them to get good sounds. However, I don't like the way that the comp cut switch is located under the tone knob. It makes me not want to use it because I know it will end up getting kicked off when I'm in the middle of a performance. You must also consider that Fulltone has improved their design since this one was made (mine is an older model). I'd like to see how the newer model compares in this category.
Sound Quality
:
10
Sounds great! I used to use a Z Vex Super Hard On to boost my amp into distortion, but once I got into the studio with it I noticed that the SHO added something that I didn't like to my sound. Zachery Vex called it a "sparkle." Meh. I dig a lot of the other Z Vex pedals for their interesting quirks, but right then I knew that I had to replace this boost pedal with something more transparent.
I decided to buy this particular pedal because Maike Zaite from Dr. Z amplification suggested it as a great pedal to compliment my Dr. Z KT-45. He was right. I mainly use the boost end to let my amp do all the work, but the distortion is also an awesome addition to my sound. It adds susstain and beefs up my leads. It's everything I need for a well defined distortion sound. I love it.
Reliability
:
10
Once I got my hands on this puppy, I opened it up to check out the craftsmanship first thing. It's dependable. Solid construction all the way. Everything was hand wired with care. Before I bought this I heard a lot of great things about Fulltone's craftmanship, and a lot of rumors about Mike Fuller's over inflated ego. Now that I actually own one of his pedals, I can see why. I imagine that it's hard to stay humble when you make such good quality shit.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I never dealt with them, but I've heard good things about their customer service. Still, I can't say.
Overall Rating
:
10
I just want to point out that I spent $200 on a used pedal because it used to belong to Page Hamilton of Helmet, and they are one of my favorite bands. My band's music is similar to Helmet's style, except we've got more of a classic rock feel. For that I believe this pedal is a good match. Fulltone seems to want to stay true to the sounds and craftsmanship of the 50's through the 70's, which is something that I prefer when it comes to tone and quality. I dislike the digitally distorted sounds that a lot modern metal bands have been using, and a lot of new effects seems to have a shorter shelf life these days. My favorite feature on the pedal is the boost because it really allows my amp to growl, which is perfect because my KT-45 sounds great on it's own. The added distortion is the icing on the cake.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $179
Submitted 09/08/2004
at 07:32am
by Jim
Email: baxterfamily<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
8
Because it has the 3-way selector switch (comp-cut, flat mids, vintage) it makes it a little more sofisticated to use....
Sound Quality
:
6
I'm playing a strat through a Fender Vibolux amp. I placed the Fulldrive 2 after my Analogman 'silver' TS-9 on my pedalboard. The Fulldrive 2 I purchased new had a problem with the 'vintage' boost channel not working (defect). The Fulldrive 2 is a nice pedal and provides a decent 'vibe' but doesn't have the sonic clarity or headroom of the Analogman TS-9 (I didn't, however, try to up the voltage to 18 volts DC which Fuller claims increases the headroom etc..). I didn't think that the Fulltone 2 was a good match with my Fender amp (maybe a Marshall plexi type) a great pedal compared to production overdrives but mediocre in the boutique pedal race.
Reliability
:
10
Mike Fuller builds great stuff, I'm sure he built this to endure the road and beyond.
Customer Support
:
8
The guy has helped me out on all my questions concerning his gear, even called me up after I faxed him a question. A bit intense if not a tad arrogant, decent support, above average for sure.
Overall Rating
:
7
A decent value, but there is better out there. I know that tone opinion is subjective, Fuller builds great products, I want fantastic products!
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 09/02/2004
at 09:20pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
Not much here, older blue one, with comp-cut knob. Four knobs, two switches, easy enough.
Sound Quality
:
6
Using B-bender teles, into budda wah, seymour duncan pickup booster, boss cs2, barber direct drive SS barber Ltd, boss c5 chorus, original smallstone phaser, carl martin delaylah, into a fender twin. All fx are powered with a VL pedal power. I tried this pedal for a bit, and was unhappy with the results. I remember doing a recording with a boogie mark II, and the fulldrive, and it sounded great, so I picked one up, thinking it would be my main Od for the twin. I was wrong. This pedal is very picky with what amps it likes. I thought Mike Fuller made this to co-exist with fenders, but the only sound I could get was a rather fizzy overdrive, with way too much presence in the extreme top end. It was also a bit muddy in the 200-300 hertz range. This combined with my fender twin, which already has a decent amount of low mid honk, made a very mushy sound. I tried hard to like this box, and as I said, I dug it through the boogie, but it's just not the Holy Grail of Od that everyone talks about. Try it before you spend the $200.
Reliability
:
8
Seems well made, but we've all heard the stories of Mike and his CS skills, so I hope it wouldn't break.
Customer Support
:
3
I heard a story from a friend of mine who worked in a guitar shop, about Mike calling him and bitching him out because he wasn't selling enough of his pedals. My friend promptly told Mike to take his business elsewhere, and discontinued selling his pedals.
Overall Rating
:
6
I just want everyone to know, you should always, always try any pedal before you buy. It's a lesson that cost me $30 since I had to resell the pedal.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $140.00
Submitted 09/02/2004
at 12:27am
by Randy
Ease of Use
:
8
Very easy to use! I have the newer model with the mids switch.
Sound Quality
:
8
My chain goes as follows - American Strat into RMC3LE Wah, Analogman Boss DS-1, Analogman Chorus, Analogman TS9, Fulltone Fulldrive II, ernie ball volume, EH Memory Man Deluxe, Boss EQ, Boss NS-2, into Upgraded Hot Rod Deluxe. This pedal is hands down awesome. I have used the analogman ts9 for awhile now and it is great but the fulldrive is amazing. It really just adds to your tone and doesn't color it with a bunch of mid-range nasal junk like most overdrives. Truly a great overdrive! So much range in tones!
Reliability
:
9
It is in a metal case... what more could you ask for? Seems sturdy and very well crafted.
Customer Support
:
9
Only wrote Mike once and got a response by the next day. Good customer service guy, right up there with Geoffrey Teese and Analog Mike!
Overall Rating
:
8
I play light rock - bluesy rock. Suits me very well for the sound I am going for. Sweet sustain and responds very well to pick attack and volume level. If it were stolen, I would probably buy a new one, but money isn't exactly plentiful these days so it might not be right away.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $175
Submitted 08/20/2004
at 07:01pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
This pedal is way too easy to get a good sound out of. It's hard to choose which kind of overdrive you want. I got the newer one, with the black nobs, not the one with the white nobs. The new one has the toggle switch witch allows you to choose between Comp-cut, FM, and Vintage settings. The manual explains it all wonderfully, but the only way to really do it is just plug in and screw around.
Sound Quality
:
10
I'm using a Gibson ES-335 into a Mesa/Boogie DC-3. As the name describes, this overdrive is just FULL. It can make any guitar and amp setup sound superb. My favorite setting has to be the Comp-cut which just is completly clean and it has the fattest sound. Once you turn the pedal off, you can't see how you ever survived without it. The FM and Vintage settings are amazing as well. You can get a very Eric Johnson fat singing tone. The boost switch is also great for going from Rhythm to lead when you want that extra boost, and overdrives the comp-cut a little, which makes a completly natural overdrive.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Seems totally solid and I would definatly use it without a backup... I wouldn't mind having another one though.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I play a blend of jazz and rock. This is the perfect pedal. I use the Full-Drive 2 like this ES-335>Full-Drive>Boss SD-1>ProCo RAT2> Guyatone MD3> Boss CE-5>Mesa/Boogie DC-3. I compared it to the Super overdrive and also the overdrive on my Mesa. The Fulltone sounded alot more FULL than either. It sounded more like my guitar through the fulltone than effects, and that's the way I like it. I use the Fulldrive through the SD-1 to get a searing lead tone, but you can get a perfect tone through the fulltone, I'm going to have to get another one. I would definatly buy another if stolen. It's the perfect pedal period.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $179
Submitted 08/13/2004
at 07:24pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
3
Not the easiest pedal to use. There are so many combinations of tones that it's hard to find the "sweet spot." It seems to either be too dirty or too clean. Hard to find that perfect, natural Fender-like tube overdrive. It's like the manufacturer tried too hard to make it be all things to all players when they should have tried for one perfect tone.
Sound Quality
:
6
Good sounding, but not as good as the Klon or Reverend Drivetrain. The clean boost is my favorite tone. The overdrive seems to change dramatically depending upon what amp or amp setting you choose. The response to pick attack isn't as natural as I need (either too dirty or too clean). With every room I play, I seem to spend the first set trying to dial in the right tone.
Reliability
:
10
So far so good.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Nver had to deal.
Overall Rating
:
5
I play rockabilly and honky tonk music. I was trying to find something to get that "just right" natural Fender overdrive at a moderate volume setting. This didn't really do it for me. For me, the Reverend Drivetrain 2 with the cap mod does the rockabilly thing best of all. I thought this might be even better, but it's not. The Klon is great too, but its pricey and takes forever to get.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $199.00
Submitted 07/29/2004
at 03:21pm
by Jack Dauber
Email: fulltoneowner at aol<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
The Fulldrive 2 is very easy to use, its self explanatory really, I do suggest reading the helpful manual and then its off to the races, this is one of the best if not the best ever.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use Gibson SG's and Les Paul's through a Marshall Bluesbreaker and a Marshall 1959slp. This thing sounds great with them and I also run a Fat-Boost. I also use both when playing a telecaster through a Fender Bassman, makes a world of difference.
Reliability
:
10
I have had no reliability troubles whatsoever, not only would I gig without a backup I would never buy a backup.
Customer Support
:
7
Mike Fuller is a walking mood swing, if you hit him right, hes very direct and nice and gets things done. Other times you can rub his ego a little wrong and he lights up a bit, a friend of mine sent back a fat-boost for repair and never heard a word from him, it just showed back up at his house fixed, kinda weird.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play rock n roll and nothing sounds better with rock n roll that a couple fulltones, I also play blues, and some country. They work great on everything. If my fulldrive was stolen I would absolutely replace it as soon as possible, no question.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $180.00
Submitted 07/28/2004
at 08:41am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
The fulldrive2 is probably the easiest pedal I've ever used to get a great tone. The first time I used the pedal I had no problems getting the sound I wanted. This pedal is very versatile. It has a true bypass so that you can create your own clean sound and the pedal, when ON, gives you a great overdrive sound without comprimising the tone you select on your amp. The manual is very easy to understand and even gives you some sort of reference on setting it. This is got to be the only pedal that I have used to go from clean to overdive to distortion with ease.
Sound Quality
:
9
I use a les paul standard with a marshall avt 100, and a fender strat with the same amp. The pedal gives great sustain even with the single coil pickups in my fender. However, the overdive "comp-cut" is awesome but the distortion is a little weak. I have to crank the amp to get the volume at my desired level when using the distortion. The sound on the overdrive has given me the ability to get the sound of artist's such as 3doors down, blink182, bowling for soup, bush, eve6, lit, just a great alternativ/pop punk sound.
Reliability
:
8
Very durable. This pedal has been to alot of gigs and has never been undependable. I would use this pedal at any gig without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
8
I play alot of pop punk and alternative rock. This pedal has always given me the sound that I want. I have been playing for about 15 yrs. I also own the ROBERT KEELEY modded BOSS DS-1 ULTRA, BOSS CHORUS, and BOSS TREMALO. I compared it with many other pedals before I decided on the fulldrive2. I chose this one because of its versatility. Although I dont like the distortion that much its still an awesome pedal. I would definetly buy another one if it was stolen. GREAT PEDAL.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $179.00
Submitted 07/28/2004
at 06:41am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
3
Not very easy to use. This is one of my main complaints. It's like the manufacturers tried to make it do everything when they should have concentrated more on doing one thing very well. It has various switches and knobs that take hours of tweaking to find a decent sound. This one has the 3-way comp cut, flat mids, vintage mids switch along with the boost knob and switch. I guess I'm too low-tech, but the fewer knobs and switches the better if you ask me. A few knobs and great tone would be perfect in my book.
Sound Quality
:
5
I know this opinion will be controversial, but I just wasn't that impressed once I played it on a few gigs. I sounded great in the store at low volume, but when I tried it on several gigs, the sound seemed to change dramatically depending upon what guitar and/or amp setting I used. I has a very nice clean boost and the Billy Gibbons/Southern Rock sound is decent, but I couldn't find a sweet spot in the "naturally overdriven old Fender Bassman" area. That surprised me, because I thought that this is what it would do best. I think most the problem has to do with what I commented on above - there are too many different settings and controls to find the one sound you're looking for. After about three weeks of gigs, I put my Reverend Overdive II back on my board and took the Fulltone out. As for gear, I use a Guild Starfire III with TV Jones Filtertrons into my overdrive of choice, then an Ibanez AD9 delay, and then into my home-made low-power tweed Twin. I also play a home-made Warmoth tele on some stuff.
Reliability
:
10
No problems.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't had to deal.
Overall Rating
:
5
I play rockabilly and honky tonk country. In my never-ending quest for more magical tone, I was looking for a pedal that would come even closer than my Revered Drivetrain II to getting that "can't tell you're using a pedal" tone. I'm not going to say the Fulltone is a bad pedal, just not what I was looking for. The only other pedal that might come closer is a Klon, but I've never tried one. I'll probably just stick with my Reverend.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 07/02/2004
at 04:02pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
5
I've tried ou this pedal three times (about six months apart each time) because of all the good reviews I've read. The first time I thought it wasn't very transparent, more of a distortion than an overdrive. The next time I had the same impressions. The last time I wanted to try one I brought my guitar (Tom Anderson Drop Top T), my favorite OD pedal yet (Reverend Drivetrain 1 - black and white) and went to my favorite guitar store to try it out again. I hooked up four pedals, the Fulldrive, my Drivetrain, a used Drivetrain II and a Nobels OD pedal. I plugged all of this into a Bogner Metropolis (a KILLER amp). The Nobels was interesting and actually quite good. The Fulldrive might be a little better but the Drivetrains shot the Fulldrive right out of the saddle. Tone wise the Drivetrains sounded almost identical except the Drivetrain II seemed to have a little sharper mid range. The Fulldrive really had a raspy, square wave sound that didn't sound like a cranked amp at all. Another thing, The Fulldrive did not compress at all. the Drivetrains have some compression. I set the drive low enough that you really can't tell the pedal is on until I hit two notes at a time. Then it sounds a lot like an amp cranked. I've read a lot of people saying a pedal doesn't compress like that's a good thing. Running a compressor into the front of it reminds me of Stevie Ray Vaughn's tone, which is usually very compressed. He relied on output tube compression. I'm 49 and have been cranking amps for over thirty years. Fender tweed amps, Fender Black face, Fender blondes, non master Marshalls and the thing is when they're dimed they all compress, usually a lot. Angus young has the classic cranked non master marshall tone and it's really compressing. It's what brings out feedback and pinch harmonics. It's almost impossible to try all of the ODs out, there are so many, but I've tried a lot and so far the Drivetrain wins easily. I didn't care for the Klon Centaur at all or the Pete Cornish Soft Sustain. I actually thought the new yellow Digitech had a pretty good dound. I want to hear some Menatone pedals but there are no dealers near Kansas City. Sorry to rag on the Fulldrive but I thought I should state my "research".
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $179
Submitted 06/06/2004
at 10:54am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
Ill admit you have to spend a good session with it to achieve the right tone from each setting, but besides that, four knobs...its pretty simple.
Sound Quality
:
10
This is the best overdrive i have ever used/owned. The thing is simply amazing. Before i bought this i owned a marshall bb2, dont get me wrong its a great od, but u just cant compare (i still use its boost mode tho) When i was searching for "that overdrive" pedal, the one that would define my sound, i started at the obvious place...the ibanez tubescreamer. I personally dont care to much for the TS9 but the reissue TS808 is a great pedal, yet still nothing compared to the fulltone. The ibanez was limited, didnt produce a lot of gain and didnt have true bypass. For a little more you can purchase the fulldrive. My next stop was the voodoo lab sparkle drive and rt 66 american od, both amazing pedals, and unique. Yet the fulldrive just stands above, it is undeniably natural and fullsounding, it doesnt color your sound at all and it is simply a remarkable pedal. My rig as of right now is a Fender 69' thinline tele goin into the fulldrive than into the marshall bb2(on boost mode), boss dd6 delay mod(analogman high end cut mod), than a RMC wizard(sensational wah) and boss tu2 tuner into a fender hod rod deville 212. overall it produces an amazing sound.
Reliability
:
10
built like a rock
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
I play classic rock/blues/jazz and a little bit of fusion. It is just an awesome pedal, without question, i recomend it to anyone looking for the ultimate od, its just awesome.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $179
Submitted 06/05/2004
at 09:04pm
by Mike
Ease of Use
:
9
Some people here have said that this isn't the easiest thing to use, but i disagree. Pick one mode out of the three, dial in the amount of gain you want, adjust the tone knob, set the output, and you're set.
The boost option is isn't really a second channel, but adds more gain to push your sound over the top.
Sound Quality
:
10
Hands down, this is the best overdrive i have ever used. I've played for 25 years, and at this point the most important thing to me is that the natural sound of my fingers on the strings (i don't use picks) comes through, as i believe that that is my sound. This pedal does exactly that. This isn't going to turn a crap sound into something great, it's made for people who already have a great sound and want to add some boost or overdrive.
I don't think there's a bad sound in this thing. The comp-cut mode is the most tranparent, and adds a boost, the FM mode (flat mids) sounds great, and the vintage mode (my favorite) adds the most gain.
So far i've only used it with single coils (i think they are much better for hearing the fingers on strings), but i'll get around to trying it with my Ibanez RG which has humbuckers.
I don't notice adding any noise that wasn't already there (i play my guitar into the Fulldrive into a Fender Blues Jr), and i just added a Digitech Digidelay today, and it sounded great with that too.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I've only had it about a month, so i can't say yet, but it seems like it's built like a tank. I don't expect any problems, and would definitely gig without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them; based on the website, and what i've read, they seem very helpful.
Overall Rating
:
9
I'm playing blues-rock with a touch of fusion, and this pedal has given me the sound i've been searching for. It's pricey, but well worth every cent to me. Again, i'm most concerned with the sound of my hands on the strings, and this is the best thing i've found to reproduce that.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $179
Submitted 06/04/2004
at 03:24pm
by Blues Man
Ease of Use
:
10
With four knobs plus the comp/cut switch, it's quite easy to use.
Sound Quality
:
10
I have played the FD2 with an ENGL Screamer 50 head, a Gibson GA-15 combo, and a Soldano Astroverb 16. There's no question in my mind that it is much more useful with an amp that lacks an overdrive capability on its own, such as the Gibson GA-15, than for an amp that already has a good overdrive sound. The GA-15, when cranked by the FD2, enters a sonic region it wouldn't dream of entering otherwise. Full-throated silky overdrive tones. But when driving a high-gain amp like the Screamer 50 or the Astroverb 16, the FD2, while certainly adding a lot to the sound, doesn't have nearly as dramatic an influence. Conclusion: if you have an amp that definitely needs a kick to get the overdrive sound, get a FD2. If you already have healthy overdrive, get the FD2 only if you're a total tone freak that needs the extra volume.
Reliability
:
10
Had mine since February 2004. Reliable so far.
Customer Support
:
7
Mike Fuller is a little cranky sometimes. Aren't we all? He'll answer your e-mail, but try to be direct and to the point.
Overall Rating
:
10
The Fulltone Fulldrive 2 can add that Plexi tone to an amp that really needs the boost. I would imagine "clean" tube amps like the Fender Twin, Fender Deluxe Reverb, Dr Z Carman Ghia, etc. benefit the most, while amps like the Soldano SLO 100, Bogner Ecstasy, or Mesa Boogie Triple Rectifier need it the least.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 05/27/2004
at 09:53am
by Steve Walker
Ease of Use
:
7
This is the fulldrive 2 model with toggle switch to choose any of the 3 modes-comp/cut,flat mids,and vintage.Then there is the boost footswitch to add more gain into the mix.Quite a number of different options available so takes some tweaking to get the best sounds from it.
Sound Quality
:
10
The sound quality on all 3 modes is very good,I have had this on my board for over a year now and it's done around 100 gigs playing mainly classic rock covers.I started off with it in vintage mode in front of a Matamp 100 watt head used as a solo boost with the amp set clean.In this configuration the fulltone excels-the vintage mode has the most available gain of the 3 options and yields a lovely liquid type sustain,very Santana like with a neck humbucker.There is a noticeable mid hump when used like this but I personally like this sound for leads,it fattens out single notes at the top end of the fretboard.
The FM mode has slightly less gain and as the name suggests flattens out the mids,this sounds good when playing rhythmn on the neck pickup.
The comp/cut is a great clean boost which does not colour your guitar tone but enhances it,if you have a good sounding rig the comp/cut will improve your tone.
After experimenting with the 3 modes I have decided that the comp/cut works the best for my set up.I have this running with an 18v supply and the comp/cut sounds fantastic,more headroom and articulation than 9v.In the green mode(stage 1) it will just 'fur up'the sound slightly in a very musical way and then step on the red footswitch(stage 2)for a very nice solo boost which does not compress like the other 2 modes.
The vintage and FM channels are very similar with only subtle changes between them,slightly more gain and mids in vintage which to my ears is much like a TS9.There is a lot of gain and volume available in the 2 high gain modes and endless sustain with harmonic feedback is no problem.However the tone control which is basically a presence control is not as effective in the 2 high gain modes,I had it set at 3(o'clock) on vintage and 2 on FM,any less than that and the sound became muddy.Also in these 2 modes the 2nd gain stage does not lift the volume it only dumps more gain in the mix,so it will not turn a single channel amp into a 3 channel amp,although I can do this by setting the amp clean,fulldrive on vintage for a solo boost,and then backing off on guitar volume for a rhythmn crunch.Works very well that way and retains tone when backed off on the guitar.
Now I get to the best feature of this pedal for my application anyway-the comp/cut,what a beautiful sound this is in front of a quality tube amp set clean,the 18v supply has made a big difference to this mode-if you have a fulldrive I suggest you try it,I am not saying that it will improve your particular rig but with my set up it has made a huge improvement,but only in the comp/cut mode,I can hardly tell any change in vintage and FM modes with 18v,although after over 20 years of live gigging I am partially deaf anyway,so what do I know.
Another plus is that the 2nd gain stage gives a much bigger volume lift in comp/cut than in the other 2 high gain modes,so playing lead work on a strat neck single coil becomes a truly uplifting experience in the red channel and you can cut through the live mix just fine.
Used this way the fulldrive is very unforgiving and will not tolerate sloppy playing-no hiding behind a huge wall of distortion with notes blurring into each other,you can hear every individual note and it has certainly made me think more about my guitar playing,and probably tightened up my technique.Also the tone control is more effective I have it at 10,and there is more volume available,I have that on 10(all settings are o'clock)as well,whereas in the 2 high gain modes it was set at 2 or 3.
Reliability
:
10
Outstanding build quality,no problems.
Customer Support
:
10
Had a slight problem with my fulltone choralflange which turned out to be operator error-fulltone responded to my e-mail within 24 hours and gave me advice to solve the problem,excellent.
Overall Rating
:
10
This pedal is a great asset to anyone playing classic rock/blues type music and is a vital part of my tone,if it were stolen then I would replace it immediately.I've been through a lot of o/d distortion pedals,including the standard boss type and also several boutique pedals and this is one of the best.
I like the comp/cut even better now at 18v,and the vintage and FM modes are both excellent overdrives.The true bypass does just that and does not affect the tone when in standby.
I am very pleased with my sound and the fulldrive has improved my playing.The vintage mode which was my favourite initially,has been replaced with a TS9 on my pedalboard,a classic pedal which I love,but the fulldrive in vintage mode can sound exactly like a tubescreamer if you want it to.
After owning the fulldrive for a while now and getting to know the sounds inside it,I don't think the comp/cut mode at 18 volts supply and put in front of a great tube amp can be beaten,if you like playing some nice blues licks try it,I don't think you will be disappointed.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $170 (I think)
Submitted 05/25/2004
at 03:36pm
by leo quintero
Email: leonardoquintero<at>yahoo dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
Actually is extremely easy to use. I personally use it for 2 purposes: for the bluesy tone and also for the booster. In fact lately I use to booster my screaming leads when I go direct to record from my Line6 Vetta.
On live it's very friendly.
Sound Quality
:
9
The quality is great. I don't use one distortion box only. I like to use different boxes and amps -including a Marshall, Line6, a Music Man, Ibanes TS10 (Analog Man modified), ADA MP1, Mesa Boogie, and other stuff. I do a lot of studio work.
The Full Tone is very natural sounding and seems to sing enough in a lot of situations.
Reliability
:
10
Extremely reliable. The battery lasts long enough. Mine has been trough a lot of gigs and sessions.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't needed it so far.
Overall Rating
:
9
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: 141.00 (#)
Submitted 05/19/2004
at 02:21pm
by Imran
Email: imranarazy at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
6
Let me clarify - I got the Creme Custom Shop FD2 with the mode switch in between the TONE and OVERDRIVE knobs. I would presume that it's in the same ballpark as the blue ones. If you're thinking of tweaking *just* the pedal for a good sound, then you're going to be in for a big surprise. POINT: My amp has 11 knobs with two push-pull swtiches for extra mid-gain and brightness. The pedal has four knobs with a three way mode switch and two footswitches. The point is, it's not just about the pedal, it's about the amp as well. So I rate this a 6 as it's not as easy to use as I would've thought.
Sound Quality
:
10
Want high gain Marshall/Mesa type sounds? Megadeath? Cradle of Filth? Corrosion of Conformity? Well, stop reading this review or any of the others. The heaviest tone you'll get by using this pedal is probably AC/DC. Unless you already have a Mesa. And of course if you define 'heavy' as 'the amount of distortion used on a down-tuned guitar'. Is Korn heavier than SRV? Hmmmm...
Setup: Japanese Stratocaster --> FD2 --> Fender Deluxe Reverb II. I have other effects, but for the purpose of this review, that was my setup.
It's not particularly noisy. Although I must say there's an increased amount of noise when I engage the pedal. This noise, however, was already present even before I used this pedal, albeit at a lower level. I guess it's the single coils. And since the pedal is a signal booster of some sort, it just amplifies that.
I bet most people agree with me that TONE is SUBJECTIVE. So I can't say if the pedal is 'great' or 'weak' sounding. But I went out on a limb and bought this pedal through mail order because of the reviews over here. What it gives me is versatility. I can nail the Clapton (current, seventies, Mayall-era) tone to a 90% accuracy (less for the Mayall-era tone) of some sort (this was confirmed by both guitarists and none guitarists alike). But if I want a Buddy Guy type tone, I can back off the OVERDRIVE and BOOST, flick the switch to Comp-Cut, and get something in the same ballpark. I haven't tried the SRV thing, though. Might work, might not.
I highlighted the last paragraph with some popular artists' sound so that you and I have a common reference. But try not to think of it as a pedal to immitate a specific artist e.g. SRV, but something as an enabler to get different sounds. Have an open mind, some patience and good tones will prevail. Remember that there are thousands of variables to get different tones. Some of it gear (amp, guitar, cable etc), some of it technique (pick angle, pick dynamics etc), some just pure luck. I bet if I played Clapton's rig, I won't sound exactly like him to save my life.
Haven't tried it with a transistor amp. Wouldn't know what that would sound like. But I bet my life it's suppose to work better with valves. Oh, get a low-ish wattage amp too. About 20-50 watts. I *think* if you have a hundred watter, you'll still need to play the amp damn loud before this pedal makes any appreciable difference. But I might be wrong.
It's a brilliant pedal, though. Solid 10. Does what it's supposed to do.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I don't gig all that much. Just the odd jam session with friends. So don't take my word on Reliability for it. Doesn't feel as tough as a Boss, though.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them. But for someone who is across the Atlantic, and has this reputation of being such a egomaniac, well... says a lot about Mike Fuller, right? I mean, you don't have to know Michael Jackson to know that he's a weirdo. But I'm not here to date Mike, just use his pedals...
Overall Rating
:
9
I've been playing for 9 years. Still trying to find my own 'sound' on guitar, but the process is wonderful. And this pedal is definitely one of those 'enablers' for me to get to a new chapter. If it was lost, I would definitely want it again, but I don't know if I could shell out the money.
Loves - It's simple job which it does brilliantly. BOOST THE SIGNAL!! BOOST THE SIGNAL!! The colour. Creaaaammm...
Hates - I'm nitpicking, but if the mode toggle switch was actually a footswitch... I wouldn't have to bend down in between songs. I could change the tone of my guitar mid-song... I could do a lot.
I went through this Radiohead-phase where I bought a bunch of pedals for weird effects. And then I heard 'From The Cradle' and took the blues quite seriously. It's nice to downsize my rig. From having 10 pedals to just one. Gives my sound some breathing space. And as much as I want to attribute this pedal to my sound, always remember that there's a reason why SRV is SRV, Clapton is Clapton, King is King. I think it's more technique than anything.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $125 used
Submitted 04/19/2004
at 05:32pm
by Brian Kahanek
Email: sidewindermusic at prodigy<dot>net
Ease of Use
:
9
Push Pull pot for Comp Cut is the only down side to this pedal. Otherwise it really runs itself. With a Vintage type Marshall or Fender Blackface it takes just a few minutes to dial this in.
Keep in mind this is the Older Orange 1996 issue FD2. Mike fixed the problem of the push pull in 2003. I am considering a buying another one for the Toggle opition. But this one ain't going nowhere!
Sound Quality
:
10
These 1996 FD2's are really amazing. I have owned three stock blue FD2's prior to this one and this one is heads and tails my favorite. The Mids are just wonderfull. I like the Flat mid option but I just can't stop playing this pedal. WIth my JTM 45 it is just like peanut butter and jelly. Have not heard a better drive pedal in my 20 years of playing.
Reliability
:
10
This one has the older switches (Black Top). I don't think they are as sturdy as the newer 3PDT's . But it has been around for 8 years and is still going strong. I gotta give it a ten .
Customer Support
:
10
Always helpfull and Pro.
Overall Rating
:
10
Belive it or not I paid $125 bucks for this "vintage" FD2. I found it in the recycler ads. I was in the Hollywood Guitar Center last week - They have two in the Glass Case for $400 and $500 bucks. ridiculous? Yes I think so - But the tone is very much worth $250. If you run across one of these old FD2's before the FM switch over and have the $$$$. Give it a shot - I will never sell this pedal.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $179.10
Submitted 04/03/2004
at 10:46am
by T-Bone Eddie
Ease of Use
:
6
This is certainly not the easiest pedal to master. You have to choose from three modes (Vintage,Flat Mids and Comp Cut), and then you have to adjust your volume, tone and the drive for each channel (OD & Boost). Getting the two channels to sound the way you want them at the volume you desire takes some careful tweaking. Plus, you have to consider the overall volume that you're playing at. What sounds good at low volume may not sound the way you want at higher volumes. That being said, you can dial in some very happening sounds if you have patience and good ears. Those who can't work with the Fulldrive II are usually lacking in one or both of these qualities or they have inferior equipment. With all of the options, anyone should be able to attain a great overdriven tone.
Sound Quality
:
9
Using a Carr Rambler amp and a variety of guitars (Reverend Slingshot, Tele Special, Les Paul, Galveston Resonator and Harmony Stratotone) with the Fulldrive in the Vintage mode, I get closer to the sound I want to hear than with anything else. And I've tried dozens of pedals from the "boutiques" on down to the pedestrian with mostly disappointing results. I had an older Fulldrive II that I sold because I didn't like the push/pull pot for the Comp Cut and I wasn't exactly happy with the Flat Mids sound. When I saw that the new version had a mini toggle switch to go from Comp Cut to Flat Mids to Vintage, I figured I'd better try one out. I'm glad I did, because it sounds excellent. There is a noticable difference in the Flat Mids and Vintage settings (despite what some of the other reviewers say) and you definitely hear it more with single coil pickups and a clean amp. I can go from a nice blusey breakup to a singing, sustaining tone and still hear the characteristics of each guitar. There is some noise (especially in the Boost channel), but it's livable. One of the best overdrives avaiable and my personal favorite until something better comes along (if it ever does!).
Reliability
:
10
Very well built! My old one never had any problems and I don't expect this one to have any. Of course, things can break, but Fulltone's products are very high in quality.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Haven't dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
9
Been playing Blues and Blues/Rock for over 30 years in mostly small to mid-sized clubs. I would definitely get another (I already did). I love the sounds, but could do with a little less tweaking of the knobs. Still, the rewards are there if you work for them. The fact that I had one and missed it when it was gone should tell you a lot. It is expensive, but not overly so. The guy who said that anyone with a soldering gun and $25 worth of parts can build one of these should build me one of his own and I'll rate it for him!
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $140?
Submitted 03/27/2004
at 04:41pm
by barryman
Email: barrycasebeer at hotmail<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
9
this pedal is really easy to use, all the knobs are very straightforward as far as how they affect the sound...but then again what pedal isn't? the manual had some great info also.
Sound Quality
:
10
my current set-up: 76 epiphone les paul, mid 90's mim strat into dunlop volume, buddha wah, eh small clone, eh holy grail, fulltone fulldrive 2, maxon OD-808, ts-9 tubescreamer, x-series digidelay, boss tr-2 tremolo, eh small stone, eh big muff, a/b box with one channel into a boomerang phrase sampler then a silvertone twin twelve, and the other into a 50 watt plexi through a vox 2x12 cab. both cabinets have celestion greenbacks.
yeah that's a lot but i like having a large palette available and in my band my current role is geared mostly towards ambient sounds and a little rhythm and lead. suprisingly this set-up doesn't really suck too much tone, it sounds almost as good as straight into the amp, not very noisy either. having listed all that, if i had only one pedal available to me it would without a doubt be the FD2. i have all my overdrives set to different settings cause i play in a 3 guitar band, and for the OD i keep on the comp-cut setting for a great volume boost with a super clear, ballsy, bright overdrive. i use the boost channel for solos, and both settings cut through very well. (especially with 2 other guitars driving) i have the volume at about 60%, tone between 10-20%, overdrive about %90 (to get a good tube breakup) and boost i pretty much reset every time i play to get a good solo volume level.
before i got the other overdrives i used the FM & vintage settings with the volume at 90%, tone around 60%, and drive at about 20% and got a pretty good full sound while using the boost to fatten it up a bit more when needed.
sorry i tend to get a bit wordy...
Reliability
:
9
only problem i've ever had was a scratchy pot but i sprayed some contact cleaner and it's great again. i'd definitely use it without a backup. the only thing that scares me are the plastic knobs, but the only reason for that is the fact that the enclosure is so heavy-duty it makes them seem light(which they're not).
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never had to use it, but the site is pretty comprehensive, plus the fact that mike signs every pedal leads me to believe they'd be pretty helpful.
Overall Rating
:
9
i play rock that ranges from heavy pop to almost metal, and i a m definitely rooted in blues and soul, but this pedal is a great match. i've been playing 9 years, seriously for about 2.
if i lost this i'd definitely replace it, even at the expense of one of my various other pedals.
i love that the FD2 doesn't color my sound, also the clarity of this pedal is brilliant as opposed to the 808 and ts-9, it's just a great overdriven cut-through volume boost that not only preserves the tone of both guitar and amp, but also pulls out the natural tone of the guitar and enhances the best qualities of both. don't get me wrong, i love the other two also, they just have different qualities.
i chose this cause one of my favorite musicians (ian moore)uses it, and i love that i can get similar tones and create my own stuff with it.
i think it's the perfect overdrive cause it has so many options, it's true bypass, and it's built rock solid.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: around 300 (euros)
Submitted 03/18/2004
at 02:25am
by alder
Email: alderbody at yahoo<dot>gr
Ease of Use
:
10
Plug your guitar in, dial ANY random setting and play...
THERE IS NO BAD SOUND OUT OF THIS PEDAL!
But even if you want to go "by the book",
the manual is simple and clear.
It's a drive pedal after all...
With the little toggle switch (Vintage,FM,Compcut) actually giving 3 different sound profiles, plus the boost switch and all 4 pots,
there is a lot to explore. (and find....)
And it's TRUE bypass.
Sound Quality
:
10
Fender - Warmoth Stratocaster and Epi Dot 335 Ltd on 1982 b/f Fender Twin Reverb. (All other pedals are OUT of the rig...)
It never gets noisy when played with a humbucker equiped guitar.
When "super driven" with a Strat (single coils) it can get noisy in positions 1,3,5. But i mostly believe that it comes from my amp which needs filter cap replacement.
"Vintage" position.
With drive set to 0 you get a signal boost and a slight "breakup".
Adjust the tone to make your sound brighter or mellower.
By lowering the volume, you gradually eliminate the breakup.
Humbuckers will breakup earlier of course.
As you roll the drive up, you get a rich, full drive(...) but always musical and singing due to the exeptional transparency of the pedal.
Adding the boost, things get serious getting into distortion territories, with great succes though.
More low-end and much more drive.
When i play the semi-hollow 335 with these settings, i have to ...travel away from the amp to avoid feedback...
In my opinion the "Vintage" profile is better when you want the typical saturated sound. (low or high)
In the "Flat Mids" position, things are similar with the "Vintage" but a little bit softer due to the lack of mids. As Mr Fuller suggests in the manual, the FM mode sounds magic with a Strat's neck pickup. It's really cool with the neck humbucker as well, as with all other pickup types and combinations, i might add...
Although the signal is overdriven, there is still so much clarity and definition. Muddy is a word that has NOTHING to do with the FD-2...
Finally, the "Compcut" position is nothing but CLEAN POWER.
And when i say power i mean power capable to tear apart a 4x12 cab!
The mild output of the Strat becomes Huge and the humbuckers must be tamed with the volume control to avoid ...heart attack!
If you dare to engage the boost channel, either you must be wearing earplugs or just live alone in a deserted area...
At least this is what happens with my 135 Watt twin...
The harmonics flow through the speakers clean and loud without ever being distorted. (Especially if you apply 18 Volts which increases headroom and clarity)
A very cool setting i use is normal and boost drives at full, volume at "9 o'clock" and tone around "3 o'clock". This way i manage to get an overdriven signal but with lots of character...
Summing, i'd like to point that in this pedal there is PLENTY OF DRIVE FOR EVERYONE, and i mean that there are so many sounds you can get out of it.
But the best way to find out is to try one, or play it for some time.
Reliability
:
10
Looks strong, feels strong. I don't think it will have any problem.
No backup needed.
Customer Support
:
9
I bought it from the internet 'cause there is no authorised dealer in my country.
The dealer(Italian) i bought it from was simply PERFECT.
Once i contacted the "headquarters" their reply was immediate and helpful, although i sensed a little "attitude"... (Maybe i am wrong)
I read other reviews stating an "attitude issue" about them, but i
think people respond to others the way they are treated.
And this applies to both sides. (...peace, people!)
The fact is that they have done a great job and that is what we should focus on.
Overall Rating
:
10
When i first bought it i was so amazed that i posted a review which was so glowing it was finally aborted...
But after having it for about 6 months i realized that i couldn't play without it and my opinion is still the same. (No flaws IMHO...)
S I M P L Y . . . P R E C I O U S ! ! !
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $110 used
Submitted 03/15/2004
at 05:37am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
8
It took a couple of weeks but I finally got a great sound out of this pedal. Originally, I was pulling out the comp cut switch. This was really fattening up the clean sound through my amp (Fender hot Rod Deville 2X12) however, I wasn't getting much drive at all.
Also, with the comp cut switch pulled, the mids really stand out. It gets a little too punchy but if you're looking to push your sound through the mix this is the way to go.
With the comp cut switch pused in and the drive turned up a bit we're startind to get into tube screamer country. The boost side of the pedal really just pushes it over the edge. I now get a really nice singing 'fulltone' sustaining gain sound. nice for soloing with the boost on and great for rythm without the boost.
Sound Quality
:
7
Great sound quality. I don't know if this pedal is really worth the $200 they charge at retail but the quality is much better than the other, more mainstream companies....sound wise anyway. You get a fairly full ranght of frequency through the pedal. Although FUlltone will tell you the pedal doesn't change the sound of the guitar through the amp (i.e exact frequency range), it's not true. The sound does change somewhat, I felt that I lost some of the high end edge going through a blues deville with PRS.
However, it's still better then the cheaper Boss and DOD effects and other such brands.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Seems great.
No problems as of yet.
Customer Support
:
1
I emailed fulltone with a question about a month ago. I'm still waiting to hear back.
Not great.
Overall Rating
:
8
It's a great pedal and I'm finally really getting the sound that I'm looking for. I bought this pedal for $110 used and I think it's worth that much. I would never buy this pedal for $200 + TAX ETC. I don't think it's worth that much, i don't care if it's handmade etc...
This is a simple boost/overdrive pedal that can be built by anyone with basic soldering skills for about $25.
I'll throw in an extra $75 to have it immediately and save the time but $200 is getting up there for a drive pedal.
Overall, i'm really starting to like this pedal.
Buy it used, there are tons of used ones out there in the market.
One of the better drive pedals.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $150 used
Submitted 01/29/2004
at 06:53pm
by chris s
Email: chrisscarborough<at>charter dot net
Ease of Use
:
9
simple to use. no manual necessary. mine is a white knob flat mid model. i think made in 2000. i have had it about 9 months and have held off on a review because i didnt want to add the same as every one else.
Sound Quality
:
9
this thing kills a ts9. use teles, strats, LP and 335. great with all. mostly use fender vibro king. i have used on probably 50 shows and i like it better each time. no loss of bass, no tone suck when off. great. not a "heavy" distortion, but pushes a great amp to be better. the key being if you use crappy gear, a boutique pedal is not going to solve the problem.
Reliability
:
9
built like a tank. one of the knobs did strip somehow, but company sent new one for no charge. sweet.
Customer Support
:
10
see above
Overall Rating
:
9
playing 25 yrs. 15 of those constant gigging. mostly southern rock, country, rock and blues. would definately replace if stolen. compared to almost all other OD pedals, this one will drive the amp, but still retain the voice of your guitar. unbeatable sound. i hate to add that with everyone else, but it is no hype. i spent years and tons of $ on "hype", but if you have a good clean tone to begin with, this will definately enhance it. Crate amps and some shitty guitar won't cut it. i recently bought a distortion pro to complement this and it does. great products. not cheap, but if you factor in all the $ spent over the years on crap, it is a bargain.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $150.00
Submitted 01/27/2004
at 09:50pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
Couldn't be easier to get a good sound out of this thing. The manual is well written but not necessary if you understand what a volume, tone and overdrive knob do.
Sound Quality
:
10
At the moment, a couple of my guitars are in for some work so I have only been able to play it with my Les Paul Classic and I have been blown away by how great it sounds I can not wait to get my strat back with new pickups to try this out. There is zero noise when either the main channel is on or even when the boost is on. I can easily get the tone that I hear in my head. It can go from a great clean boost (Comp Cut) to a nice fat tubey blues sound (Vintage).
Reliability
:
10
As soon as I got it home, I opened it up to pop out the battery as I prefer to use it with a power adaptor. The look of this pedal inside is impeccable. It is written on the Fulltone website that after playing a Fulltone pedal and after looking inside a Fulltone pedal.... if you don't understand why the price is what it is that you SHOULD go play something else. Well this couldn't be more true. The craftsmanship is top notch. I totally rely on this pedal.
Customer Support
:
10
I emailed Mike Fuller in regards to a question I had and I got an immediate reply. It was a lengthy reply considering the question I had and Mike totally set me straight. In a good way!
Overall Rating
:
10
I play a wide variety of styles and have an equally wide source of influences. I have been playing for about 15 years now. My current set up is either a Les Paul Classic, Fender California Strat or Ibanez 540 Radius into Budda Wah -> Fulltone Mini Deja' Vibe -> Fulltone Ultimate Octave -> Fulltone Full-Drive 2-> Fulltone Distortion Pro -> Johnson J-Station (set to Blackface for a clean speaker sim.) -> TC Electronic D-Two -> TC Electronic M-One -> Delta 1010 soundcard for direct recording and output through M-Audio SP-5B's. The J-Station is the only Blackface speaker sim. that I have found to be useful. I have a Boss GT-5 and GT-6 and have a POD XT and a Yamaha DG Stomp. I am considering getting a Palmer Speaker Simulator so that I can run my pedals into my Fender Twin for direct recording but for the time being the J-Station is my best alternative. If it were lost or stolen I would buy another Full-Drive 2 withough hesitation. I really like the way that I can get a nice clean boosted sound or a nice Tube Screamer type breakup with no noise and tube-like dynamics. Much more so than with an actual Tube Screamer. It is the most musical pedal I have tried. I can go from very clean to a full on fat tube sound by simply hitting the Boost button. I have not found a single thing that I have about this pedal. My favorite feature is the Boost switch that just takes the pedal over the top. I have about 20 different overdrive pedals ranging from a Visual Sound ROute 66 to an Ibanex Tube Screamer and the Full-Drive 2 smokes all of them in terms of realism and tube like feel. If there was anything I wish it had it would be a 3rd channel that would allow you to go from Comp Cut to Vintage to Boost all without have to change the little toggle switch. All of my Fulltone pedals have opened up a whole new world of inspiration for me. These pedals are worth their weight in gold and soud equally as good.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $112.50 used
Submitted 01/27/2004
at 05:35pm
by rick
Ease of Use
:
9
I have found this pedal to be fairly easy to use, but it took me a couple of weeks to figure how to get the most out of it. Not sure about the manual, i bought this used without a manual. maybe i'll try to order one.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a Tele 72 Custom>boss tu-2>boss cs-2>fulldrive 2>guyatone mc-3>fender hot rod deluxe. Its a fairly simple setup that works well in the context that i play...mainly blues/funk/rock. i don't know if this is possible, but it seems like the fulldrive actually makes my rig quieter. before getting it the chorus was noisier. I absolutely love the overdrive on this pedal. warm, organic, natural, very responsive to my playing, breaks up beautifully. very bluesy when i want it to be. after trying different settings i found that if i match the volume to my clean channel and then turn the overdrive way up with the comp/cut switch up it sounds incredible. the harder i play the more overdriven it sounds and vice versa.
Reliability
:
9
haven't had it long, but it seems very sturdy and so i'll give it a 9. i will be using it at gigs without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
no experience here
Overall Rating
:
10
I play blues, funk, rock in a jamband format. Been playing for 28 years. I also have many acoustics (martin,taylor,gibson) and a few resonators (round and squareneck). i also own the PA for the band...mackie mixer, laney speakers, audio-technica mics. currently shopping for a strat. If this fulldrive were stolen i'd hop right back on ebay and find me another one. this box has really helped me find my sound. in the past i used an mxr+ distortion. there's just no comparison, even though its really a different kind of pedal. the fulldrive overdrive is just so juicy, makes me wanna play all day long. warm, organic, so responsive....reminds me of all my blues heroes. the only negative i have found is that i had to remove the rubber feet in order to apply velcro so that i could attach it to my board, small pain in the ass, but no big deal. great pedal, highly recommended for those who appreciate warm, tube tone, overdrive.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $225
Submitted 01/24/2004
at 08:23pm
by Just some guy
Ease of Use
:
8
It's pretty easy to work with as far as overdrive pedals go. I've got two of the older orange FDII's from the mid-90's and one of the new custom shop FDII's.
Sound Quality
:
10
This pedal has earned a permanent spot in my blues/rock rig. My usual blues rig is a pair of PRS McCarty's --> Demeter Compulator --> FDII --> Menatone King of the Britains --> DR Z Route 66 --> THD Hotplate --> early 70's Marshall 4x12 slant cab with greenbacks. I used to use the FDII with an old blackface Pro Reverb I had and it sounded equally great.
I use the FDII for a very mild overdrive sound, and I use the boost for solos. Works great. The tone know really covers a lot of ground in lower gain settings.
Here's a cool tone trick I learned from Zachary Vex: Imported Japanese 9-volt batteries tend to be slightly overcharged and sound excellent in fuzzes and overdrive pedals. They give these pedals a bit more gain & touch sensitive. In the FDII they are simply magical.
Reliability
:
10
I've been using Fulltone pedals for about 4 years, and have a Choralflange. No problems at all.
Customer Support
:
3
Mike or his assistant usually return my messages in a day or so. However, Mike is usually blunt, sometimes rude, and twice he's been flat-out obnoxious.
I've been in the industry a long time, and I have to say that Zachary Vex is equally busy with his boutique pedal company yet he always makes me feel like I'm the most important person on Earth whenever I speak with him. The same goes with the guys at PRS & Mesa Boogie.
Mike, if you're reading these reviews, I would humbly ask that try to be a wee bit nicer to your customers. It won't cost you anything and will definately help your business in the long run.
Overall Rating
:
7
I've been playing Fulltone pedals (FDII's and a Choralflange) for 3-4 years and they're all built very well and are extremely musical. They're as professional grade as it gets.
However, when I compare the customer service to other companies I regularly deal with (Dr. Z, Z. Vex, Mesa Boogie, Taylor, PRS), I just can't justify a higher overall rating for a Fulltone product.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 01/19/2004
at 02:20pm
by frank
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
This is an update to my first review.
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
Well, I've got to change my opinion to some degree. I was able to crank of the Marshall TSL 100 and the tone of this unit really came through! I was quite suprised by the clarity and focus. I still reserve my prior opinion to low-volume playing.
1 for low volume
7 for cranked tube amp
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Hungry, Hungry Hippo!
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: 200 (Euros)
Submitted 01/05/2004
at 05:33am
by Sonny
Ease of Use
:
10
Whats there to say about "Ease of Use"?
Sound Quality
:
9
Guitars: Fender Strat 67 Reissue, Fender Strat-Malmsteen signature
Gibson Les Paul, Ibanez JS100
Effects: Boss NS2, Boss EQ, Boss HM, Boss OD1, Korg AX1500G,Morley Wah
Amplifiers: Fender Blues Deville, Crate 15W practice amp, Line 6 Flextone 2
It took me a while to tweak this unit to my liking, did some experiments as to where to position this in my pedal chain. Also experimented on using the FD2 together with an AX1500G, morley wah, boss eq and NS2. Finally pinned the result I want. A sound so fat and full of balls, and i mean REALY FAT. I ve read the other reviews, and one guy said it sounded spitty and flatulent...well i guess some patience in tweaking it will be worth it...
I too was frustrated after buying it and used it in my practice amp at low volumes, because i do not hear any sonic differences. But putting it thru the Fender amp, i was blown away by it. I do not even have to put the volume of the Amp pass 4 where a without it, i go to 7 or 8 on the Amp volume.
A piece of advise is: Do not turn on the BOOST of the pedal when you are already using another pedal's distortion. Then it gets out of control, u'll feedback and noise...I only turn on the boost for rhythm guitar playing, on solos, i turn it off and rely on my other distortion pedal
Reliability
:
No Opinion
its brand new.....lets see how it goes.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
its brand new.....lets see how it goes.
Overall Rating
:
9
I love guitar music of any kind all thru my life.i have been playing the past 15 years, and gigging for almost half that.This effect pedal enhances your sound. Do not expect major distortion out of this unit because its not what it is for. its good for shaping the guitar sound, and boy it really cuts thru the mix....
A piece of advise is: Do not turn on the BOOST of the pedal when you are already using another pedal's distortion. Then it gets out of control, u'll feedback and noise...I only turn on the boost for rhythm guitar playing, on solos, i turn it off and rely on my other distortion pedal
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $180 used
Submitted 01/02/2004
at 11:01am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
very easy
Sound Quality
:
7
I used this in place of a ts-9. not the same, lacked character to me. Be good for a clean amp I bet, but didn't work for me. TS-9 to boost an already overdriven amp is much better. All depends what your looking for. This doesn't have the edge of a TS-9 and I meesed with it for quite some time but never was quite there. I strongly disagree with the last guy (Frank I think) it's all a matter of taste. Mike Fuller makes excellent equipment and that's not SVR dickhead, probably Mike.
Reliability
:
10
awesome
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never needed it
Overall Rating
:
7
I like a tube driven agreesive (but not medal) sound. I like to hear a guitar cry when I push it. This pedal just didn't create that. Maybe it's not supposed to. Good for a clean amp to make it oversriven. Basically turn it into a 3 channel amp. The boost is one of the best I've heard, I mean you really get a BIG boost in volume, very cool. Just not what I was looking for.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $200
Submitted 01/01/2004
at 10:38pm
by Bryan Jerabek
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy, not much else to say.
Sound Quality
:
10
I use a wide varitey of guitars (1972 telecaster deluxe, rickenbacker 360, old 50's silvertone hollowbody, strat loaded with duncan 5-2's), running through either a silvertone twin twelve or hiwatt custom 100. I play lots of diffrent styles (beatles, wilco, velvet underground, belle and sebastian, zepplin, mogwai, at the drive in, blood brothers, t.rex, chambers brothers). ton's of influences. every sound out of this thing is useable. Covers all the bases.
Reliability
:
10
I've toured the country 6 times, I would rely on this thing more than either of my amps.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
no need
Overall Rating
:
10
For the older style rock I like to play, this is the sound. The only other distortion I use is a vintage big muff, obviouslly a very diffrent sound. Sounds good live, sounds good on record. There is no coloration of your guitar, or amps sound. I could waste alot of time talking about how great this pedal is, or you could go buy one. So go buy one.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/30/2003
at 10:40am
by Frank
Email: fdesalvo<at>cox dot net
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
It's a very straight-forward unit with a simple layout.
Sound Quality
:
1
Think Jumanji, baby (see below)!
2000 Les Paul Studio into a Marshall JCM2000 Half-Stack. As this unit does nothing more than drive the input of your amp, it's pretty quiet.
In my opinion, this unit is very transparent, in that the tone and character of the guitar is unaltered. However this is where I will stray from the pack regarding the sounds available in this unit.
I don't like it at all. Granted, I only played it with a Fly Deluxe and the aforementioned LP, but the overdrive is very spitty and flatulent. I cannot imagine anyone trying to achieve this particular sound or a use for such a sound. The useful range of the drive knob is very narrow and limited to the 1st quarter of its rotation. I've had plenty of time to play around with this device, but I can't find a satisfying sound within it.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I'm glad that I don't own it because I find it unsatisfying. IT does seem well thought-out and engineered to last.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
3
I'm not trying to sway anyone here or be a smart-alleck, but this unit sounds like a pack of flatulent water buffaloes in the throws of passion--heaving and undualating in a shallow pond.
Maybe I was looking or expecting some grit or distortion out of this box, but realize that I went in knowing that this is an Overdrive unit. All I wanted was some nice, thick grit and what I got was humping hippos.
It's really that bad...It will make you think your speakers are blown regardless of the position of the amp's tone controls. It also makes noises similar to dying preamp tubes...Don't even try this thing out with a neck humbucker.
Mike Fuller seems to be a reputable fellow, but why is he using a clip of SRV playing a live song to demonstrate the sound of one of his pedals??
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $180
Submitted 12/23/2003
at 09:39am
by Darin
Email: hawkeye1717<at>yahoo dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
Extremely easy to set up and use. Mike supplies an instruction manual that explains all functions. The unit is built like a brick and is hand numbered and signed(by Mike) on the back. Just plug it in (9volts or 18volts) and your off and running getting great tones right away. There are many tonal options with this unit and all of them are fantastic.
Sound Quality
:
10
I'm running this with a Ernie Ball Silhouette Special(w/ Duncan Custom Shop EVH humbucker) thru a Bogner Shiva 1x12 Combo. Other effects in the chain inclued: Vox 847 Wah(modded for True Bypass), the Fulltone, Fulltone Choralflange, and a Boss DD-3 Delay straight into the amp. The Fulldrive is VERY transparent(True Bypass when off) in the chain which allows the tone of the amp/guitar to come through. I use this primarily as an overdrive for my Clean channel and it is very quiet when engaged. It does get a bit noisy when used with the Gain channel(but I don't need it with the Shiva's gain). The pedal basically gives me 3 tonal options on the Clean channel: Pristine Clean(w/ pedal off), bluesy Eric Johnson to SRV rythem's when on and the Boost function is sweet for a boost on your lead's or as a slightly dirtier rythem setting. Note: This is an Overdrive pedal, NOT a Distortion box. Your not gonna go from Clean to a Nu Metal tone with this on hehe. It's perfect in the chain with a really good tube amp and guitar for clean boosts and lead boost.
Reliability
:
9
I've only had the pedal for about a month now and it's working perfectly. It's built VERY well and is in a steel case. I could run over it with my car and I bet it would still work fine.
Customer Support
:
10
All of my contacts with Fulltone have been very positive. Mike returned all of my emails within 24 hours to answer my questions. Great company and very personable..they are there to help you find YOUR tone.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play anything from blues to metal and this pedal helps me cover alot of ground. I've been playing for 19 years and have tried a ton of overdrives/distortions and this is by far the most useful box I've had. If it were lost or stolen, I'd get another one immediately as its now a huge part of my setup. It sounds amazing when on but I really love how it is so transparent in my FX Chain when it's not in use. This allows the tone of my amp to stay true whether the pedal is on or off. The only thing I wish it has was one of the Fulltone AC/DC regulators included with the pedal(for $180 they should toss that in imo). If your looking for a really good, hand crafted Overdrive with many tonal options, you cannot go wrong with the Fulldrive(same goes with thier Choralflange pedal).
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $179
Submitted 12/17/2003
at 09:38am
by Jsmith
Email: Jsmith at reshealthcare<dot>org
Ease of Use
:
10
Idiot proof - easy to set-up any tone/
Sound Quality
:
10
I run this in my all-Fulltone rig consisting of clyde deluxe,DV2,CF, and FD2! This goes into a Guytron GT100 and my PRS SIngle cut with Rio Grande BQ Bucker (bridge) JB59 (Neck). Awesome,awesome. Quiet and as clean or dirty as you want without changing your natural direct to amp tone...this thing enhances not encroaches on your tone.
Reliability
:
10
A tank couldn't smash this thing
Customer Support
:
8
These guys are busy, but they always get back to me the same day (whenever I've had a question regarding tips, technique of usage, etc.) Email works great with them- no problems
Overall Rating
:
10
I play pop/alt rock-this thing cuts through the rest of the band just fine - My 2 channel amp is now 4 channels thanks to this...AGain this thing will enhance your tone and give it that something extra to propell you...once you get one, you can't live without it-like an appendage, you'll carry it with you everywhere youy play! Believe me! AFter 20 years+ playing through every countless pedals - from Rat to MXR, Boss, etc. This is the real deal for serious pros.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/13/2003
at 09:53pm
by RG
Email: south<dot>paw2 at verizon<dot>net
Ease of Use
:
8
Mine is a 2002 model. I have to admit when I first used it I didn't really understand what it did. I didn't really hear what all the hype was about, I put it away and basically forgot about it for about a year. Then while going thru some stuff I decided to check it out again. The second time around I got it! It is a very good boost with just the right amount of sizzle. Maybe it was the amp I used it with, but I was blown away. It made my amp sound huge and gave me sustain that could last for days. There are more than enough different ways to tweak this pedal to get a sound uniquely yours. So on the ease of use thing, I would say that it is very easy to use but you have to go in with the right expectations. This is not a distortion type of pedal, it is a booster that can add some gain but it is meant to be used in combination with your amp's gain or distortion pedal...and it really does work great for bringing your amp to life. But you probably know this already.
Sound Quality
:
9
Virtually transparent with just a bit of sizzle at certain settings. It is all good. True bypass...you can't go wrong. I find that I keep it on all the time and hit the 'boost' for a little extra umph for leads, works great for me.
Reliability
:
10
Built tough. No problems with any fulltone products.
Customer Support
:
10
Excellent response to email and phone.
Overall Rating
:
10
I mostly play guitar rock music. This pedal works great, I recommend spending some time with it, it will really help any guitar/amp sing like never before. Excellent value considering the sturdy hand-made construction. The warranty is, 5 years, which is great for a piece of equipment you are constantly and purposely stepping on. And with the true bypass you know your tone is preserved.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $199
Submitted 11/25/2003
at 12:26pm
by Keith
Email: keith<at>remedylost dot com
Ease of Use
:
9
This is a continuation of my Fulldrive II review from 10/11/02.
This pedal, with its four knobs, and push/pull-pot (Volume knob can disengage the circuits compression) is pretty straight forward.
The only difficulty one could have is deciding which setting(s) they like best, as the pedal is absolutely musical.
And the dual channel functionality is great - I cannot live without it.
It won't make you play better...but if you know how to play, it will help you sound much better.
Sound Quality
:
10
My gear collection has grown some the past year.
Guitars: 88 Fender Tele (MIJ) w/Seymour Duncan Hotrails & (2) Epiphone Les Pauls w/ Seymour Duncan JB's in the bridge.
Effects: Boss TU2>Ibanez FL9>Fulltone FDII(18V)>Vox/Keeley Wah>Ibanez AD9>Tone-Jam Sniper EQ. DC Brick providing power to the pedals.
Amp: 50 watt 1978 Marshall JMP & Red Bear 4x12 (Celestion G12L35's).
I may have added some goodies, but the sound is still OMFG awesome.
I still prefer the compression removed from the circuit - that hasn't changed at all. But the biggest change came when I powered it up with 18 volts via my DC Brick. WOW.....
On 18 volts the FDII is even more. The thing I like best about it is that its very natural and amp-like. Its like turning up the pre amp gain on my JMP, only better. I don't like artificial, fake, saturated distortion. I like organic, natural drive. I want to hear the am and the guitar. Powered on 18 volts, the FDII gives me what I like....AND ITS A TWO CHANNEL DRIVER/BOOSTER !!!!
The thing is tits.
My single channel amp now is basically 3 channel fire breathing motherf*#$er. Yummy.
Being the tone snob I am, I have since tried the HBE Power Screamer, dual TS9's, TS9/BD2, the Mesa V Twin, Barber Tone Pump & Direct drive (both let me down...). You know what ? They all failed to win me away from my FDII. All failed.
I am so excited by my tone that I cannot contain myself. I have found my sound - the somewhere between Adam Jones (TOOL) and Dean DeLeo (STP).
Check out www.remedylost.com for some sound reference.
Reliability
:
9
Well I have had it for over a year, and it seems to be just fine.
The only qualm I have is that the foot switches were sticking some, once in a while. I have since lubricated them (WD40) and all is back to normal.
I would like a second FDII just to have, but I sleep fine knowing that my FDII won't fail me.
Customer Support
:
9
Everyone at Fulltone is awesome and super friendly.
I don't try to shoot the shit with them, but I am not being an ass either. I have a question, I ask it, they answer it. Pretty simple.
Responses have been very professional and very fast.
No complaints.
Overall Rating
:
10
The FDII is part of what I do.
I am addicted to the clean boost it provides when powered with 18 volts. I am hooked on the dual channel functionality. I love what it does for me...by working woth my gear to make a better tone.
The FDII is all that. After all of the reviews its gotten so far it really is deserving of all the 9/10's for each category.
If you need to hear the FDII in action, doing something other than blues/classic rock, check out www.remedylost.com
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: 330 (CAD)
Submitted 10/20/2003
at 08:07pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
Piece of cake! "Overdrive" sets normal channel distortion, "boost" sets boost channel distortion. Volume and tone affect both channels. Vintage/FM/Compcut sets the type of gain on both channels. A couple of pages describing the controls are included.
Sound Quality
:
9
Two words: scha weet. Great clean boost in compcut, vintage and FM mode both deliver that nice bluesy sound. Only possible gripe is that there isn't much difference between FM and Vintage on my setup. But, seeing as it sounds great on either, that's OK.
Reliability
:
9
The only thing you might be able to do to this pedal is break one of the plastic knobs by hitting it repeatedly with a hammer.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I bought it from a Canadian dealer, "Terry's guitars". They were excellent. I haven't had to talk to Fulltone themselves at all, nor do I expect that I ever will.
Overall Rating
:
8
This pedal is awesome for bluesy tones or just giving good clean boost control with compcut. I play a lot of different styles, and this pedal's flexibilty is great.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 10/10/2003
at 02:00pm
by Blind'n One Eye
Ease of Use
:
10
Easy as Pi!
Sound Quality
:
10
Very nice, open, amp like quality with this pedal. Versitile in tone. Everything from clean boost, blues, rock & beyond and they all sound very natural. The comp / cut is a useful feature. Using this with two solid state amps at the moment. Can't wait to tube it! I also use a Barber Direct Drive, Vox Valve Tone and a Boss Blues Driver. They are all excellent sounding pedals and do very similar, but different things. They all compliment each other well and it's nice to switch between them for various overdrive flavours.
Reliability
:
10
Looks to be very solid in the build department. I can't imagine anything going wrong with it.
Customer Support
:
10
I've yet to deal with them, but from waht others on this site say, it sounds like I would ahve no problem with service if anything did happen to it.
Overall Rating
:
10
Great pedal. I would be satisfied if this was the only overdrive I had. The fact that it's two pedals in one is a bonus. Look at the roster of Fulldrive users. If it's good enough for them...it's obviously good enough for me!
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: 199 (pounds sterling)
Submitted 10/10/2003
at 10:33am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
How simle do you need it !?
Sound Quality
:
10
playing my musicman luke through my pittbull 50 cl set to a really good rock crunch on green channel. All controls set to 12 o clock on the fulldrive2. Perfect !A solo sound that increases the drive enough and fattens the sound without mudding it up, slightly less treble than my crunch sound.Just perfect singing fat solo sounds.I have owned loads, tube screamers of various ages etc etc etc, but nothing touches this thing. Had reservations about the price but tried it and would buy another tomorrow.
I have been looking for this sound for years
Reliability
:
10
Built like a brick s**thouse.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
No need for it yet.
Overall Rating
:
10
I have the Luke as mentioned with the vitage trem not the old floyd crap, and a PRS McCarty Soapbar, through a VHT Pitbull 50 CL head and Marshall four twelve with vintage thirties. Play rock/blues so like a nice transparent rock crunch sound and a big fat focussed compressed lead sound, the VHT red channel doesn't seem to compress the lead tone too well at the volume I use it so I leave the amp with one setting, green channel set to high gain with gain around 1 o clock.
Hit this pedal on top of that and I'm in heaven. Thank you Fulltone!
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $199
Submitted 09/18/2003
at 09:31pm
by Johnny
Email: Johnny at stereocrush<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
9
easy to dial. comp-cut changes level quite a bit as you might expect- everything else requires little work.
Sound Quality
:
10
gibson sg and 67'v reissue- humbuckers with sunn solarus (very clean tube head).
'sound' is as close to transparent as any gain-box I've heard. highs are not compromised (or colored much either)- absolutely NO loss of lows. amazing really. 'sounds' exactly as billed- like your amp with even harmonic natural gain.
Reliability
:
10
great construction. very solid. power supply works great. switches are great and click in and out crisply. a perfect 10.
Customer Support
:
9
they were cool to buy from.
Overall Rating
:
10
it's a 'drive' and not a 'distortion' pedal. put it in front of an amp you like and you'll be very happy with the results.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $180.00
Submitted 09/17/2003
at 11:31am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
If you know what you're looking for, you'll attain it within minutes, provided your amp is producing a good clean tone that you like.
Sound Quality
:
10
My rig is a Fender Vibro Verb '63 reissue w/2 10" Weber Ferromax speakers, JD Telecaster w/Fralin pickups, Gretsch 6122S, Buddah Wah, Line 6 DL-4 Delay. This box is quiet and very transparent. The effect is godlike. Dazzling drive. I'm in heaven.
Reliability
:
10
This thing is built like a Hummer. Maybe better. Just open one up and looking at the wiring job and you'll agree. Rugged, reliable, ready to rock.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
10
I play all styles and do a lot of session work. This always delivers the god-like tone that I need to do the job. The ONLY reason this box doesn't get an average rating of 10, is because CHILDREN WRITE IN AND COMPLAIN ABOUT THE COLOR KNOBS THEY RECEIVED AND CRAP ON THE RATING WITH A SCORE OF "1"! I think that review should be recalled.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $200.00
Submitted 09/13/2003
at 07:02pm
by mick
Ease of Use
:
10
Awesome! I am pleased with this pedals simple use. Yeah I know what your going to say "aren't all pedals easy to use?" true enough...
but with some modeling pedals you may have to be an engineer or devote way to much time to "dialing" in the sound or effect you may want.
Sound Quality
:
10
As far as the setup I keep it real simple. I run this with a crybaby and that is it....I can't stand a drowned out or muddy signal..plus I feel that with to many pedals your trying to hide for maybe lack of talent?
As far as amps go I am using Mesa, Fender, & Gibson with a Les Paul
with this classic setup there is no lack on the FD2 FR. I was also using yhe FD2 blue model with the pull switch ( I bought it used ) now compared to each other BLEECH the sound was flat so I just cranked to use as a distortion(it could of been cooked). Overall it does a job and does it well.
Reliability
:
10
Can I depend on it? sure I can! much more than my crunked bass player.
With out a back up I'd have to I don't have another one and I can't get one until someone dumps it one me.
Customer Support
:
10
Very helpful with a quick response.
Overall Rating
:
10
As far as styles of music I play everything from jazz, blues, rock, funk, reggae, and this with the opition of BOOST covers it all.
I have been playing all my life. Now if it were to be stolen I'd replace it if I could. I have tried lots of diffrent pedals like EH and the Ibanez stuff nothing could compare, this is damn near as good as it gets I also love the fact that there are about 97 other people that own this pedal!(you know who you are)
Peace.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 09/11/2003
at 04:27pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
Very easy.
Sound Quality
:
9
Not noisy to me. Don't like it with my Marshall & L.P. but can't live without it with my Strat & '66 Twin!
Reliability
:
10
When I first got this pedal I noticed the Overdrive pot was a bit scratchy but because I loved the tone so much I decided to live with it. Well, it gradually got worse until finally I HAD to do something. I emailed Fulltone & their respose was "send it back." That was the whole email! Anyway I reluctantly mailed it out on a Sat. afternoon wondering what I'd do for the next month or so w/out my Fulldrive. Well I got home from work on Thursday and noticed the small package by my front door. NO WAY!! It's true, mt Fulldrive was back & fully repaired (better than when I first got it) in less than a week!!
Customer Support
:
10
See Above.
Overall Rating
:
9
I love the pedal & I'm very pleased with the company. I'll definitely look to Fulltone first when I go looking for other pedals
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $185
Submitted 08/17/2003
at 02:17pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
Very self explanatory...Volume knob controls volume...tone knob affects how much high frequency in the overdrive you hear....overdrive affects how much overdrive...and boost affects how much GAIN, not volume boost is provided in the second channel. also included is a cool toggle swith in between the tone and overdrive knobs that changes the overdrive sound and "compcut" works great for a clean boost.
Sound Quality
:
10
The best solidstate overdrive pedal i've ever heard. my setup is this: 1997 am. deluxe fat strat with vintage noiseless pickups or 1999 american tele> MXR Supercomp> Ernie Ball Volume> Boss BD-2 Blues Driver> Ibanez TS-9 tubescreamer> Fulltone Fulldrive 2> Boss TR-2 tremolo> Line 6 MM-4 Modulation> Boss Noise Reducer> Line 6 dl-4 delay> Fulltone fat boost> Fender Twin Reverb reissue.
It is a noisy pedal, yes, but not noticeable when im not playing thanks to the noise reducer. it is very much worth the noise for the quality of sound this thing produces. simply amazing. my last overdrive pedal EVER.
The boost is a very nice option, but keep in mind that it is not a volume boost but simply adds however much gain you want to it so that you can fatten up a sound without adding volume...get a fatboost or a klon to boost it.
Reliability
:
10
Sturdy. Never had a problem, and i would use it without a backup even though i do have 2 other overdrive pedals on my board i use for diff. things.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
I've never had to deal with them at all.
Overall Rating
:
10
I give it an overall rating of 10. i can't help it, it just sounds so good. i play mostly experimental indie rock and this pedal blows me away. i would buy another one with out any question if this thing were lost or stolen. i don't see any downsides to this thing unless noise annoys you. This thing inspires me to write a song everytime i play on it. i love it!
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $199.00
Submitted 08/03/2003
at 05:34pm
by Dan L
Email: guitardan at cox<dot>net
Ease of Use
:
9
I was able to get a good sound very quickly after I turned the pedal on. There aren't many knobs to tweek and each one is pretty self explanatory. The mini toggle switch in the middle might take a few minutes to figure out but the manual explains what options you've got here. I would note that I heard no difference in sound, tone or volume between the "normal" OD channel and the boost channel when the mini toggle switch was set to the vintage position. I asked the store owner about this - and he said the boost switch does not work in the vintage mode. The manual does not address this issue. It really doesn't impact me because I prefer setting the mini toggle switch to the FM position.
Sound Quality
:
9
I will primarily use a mid 90's Fender Strat plus or an early 80's Fender Telecaster - both guitars have a Seymour Duncan Hot Rails pick up in the bridge position - running into a Fender DRRI, a Fender Hot Rod DeVille 2x12 or a Mesa Boogie DC-5 head and 2x12 cab. I don't think it's noisy at all - I've used noisier pedals. I don't usually hear the sounds of another guitar player when I'm playing...but this is probably as close to Eric Johnson's tone as I've ever heard (toggle switch on FM - Boost switch on and dimed - tone knob slightly more than 1/2 way). Full, fat, creamy tone that works great for everything from blues to rock and beyond. I also love how this is really 2 pedals in one. No need for my compressor anymore because I can get a slightly gritty, compressed boost using the "normal" channel and a fat, rich, sustaining overdrive tone when I hit the boost switch. Both channels clean up well when backing off the guitar's volume too. Beautiful tones man!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
I really can't comment here - well no rating anyway. The pedal is still new to me. I've been a Boss pedal guy for 20 years, so this pedal has a lot to live up to as far as being reliable.......but it seems very well built and from everything I've read about Mike Fuller's products, it should last me a long long time.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
N/A
Overall Rating
:
10
This is easily the best sounding overdrive pedal I've ever used in my 28 years of playing guitar. I really didn't think any OD pedal could be built to sound this good.
I primarily play rock, blues, and some jazz fusion. This pedal is a perfect match for the stuff I play and for most of the gear I own. My Fender tube amps and Fender guitars love this pedal. If I lost this pedal I would buy another one immediately - the tone is awesome. The only pedal that I tried out that came close to the tone of the FD2 was the Reverend Drivetrain pedal. Well, sort of close - I A/B'd both pedals against each other and after a few minutes the choice was clear, and the Drivetrain doesn't have the Boost feature of the FD2.
Mike Fuller's a genius and I'm a very happy guitar player. I've been searching for this pedal for a long, long time.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: 350.00 (CAN)
Submitted 06/30/2003
at 05:05pm
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
This i think will be my last review for the FD2. Ive had it for roughly a year and now its safe to say that i found my tone. This thing isnt really that hard to set up. in compressed mod. its the comp cut mod which, once figured out and put the 18v in is the greatesy sound in the worl.d
Sound Quality
:
10
The thing is a tad bit noisy with the 18v but nothing to get in a fuss about, truly not noticable unless you really listen for it. I first the compressed setting was the greatest thing in the world but now that ive figured out the compcut the compressed sounds like pure garbage! the compcut mode is so beautiful and clean with a good tube amp and a quality strat. the drive mode is just on the verge of breaking up sound. then the boost is this beautiful drive that is not compressed at all and is just pure goodness.
Reliability
:
9
i trust that it wouldnt break.
Customer Support
:
9
had a chat with mike a couple of times about other products. always emailed me within the day or the next. very polite and to the point.
Overall Rating
:
9
i play all sorts of music. from the stones, cream and hendrix to vaughan, pearl jam and nirvana. this pedal makes great for when crunch drive is needed. also can be used as an excellent boost to accompany your amps drive.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $200+
Submitted 06/13/2003
at 06:08am
by Michael S
Ease of Use
:
5
Mike Fuller's accompanying manual for this overpriced, virtually useless box gives a few cursory, not-too-helpful settings. It was difficult to use in the sense that I could never dial in a usable sound.
Sound Quality
:
4
I play a slightly modified G&L S-500 Gold sparkle strat through a Fender Hot Rod Deville. I'm in both a surf instrumental band, and a band that is not a surf instrumental band. The Full Drive took up space on my pedalboard alongside a Pro Co Rat, Dan-Echo, Ibanez Chorus, Boss Tremolo. Anyway, I purchased this FD out at the local 47th st. Boutique, mostly based on glowing reviews, and the fact that, well, if it cost 225.00, it must be capable of something interesting, right? Right away the overdrive sounded suspiciously thin. But I bought it anyway, reassuring myself that I'd be able to dial in an acceptable sound eventually. Boy was I wrong. The comp-cut effect, when engaged, gave you a certain amount of gain on the green channel, but muddied the tone, and basically sounded like thick static from a transistor radio. There is also a needlessly wide discrepancy in volume between the "green" channel and "red" boost channel. In short: the green channel with comp-cut off, is a virtually gain-less volume boost, unless you're playing at arena-rock levels. The green channel with comp-cut on sounds feeble and squashed, and destroys my strat's normally cutting tone. The only time I used the comp-cut was when I combined the FD with my Rat, to get the maximum in thick mid-rangey Jesus and Mary Chain fuzz-blanketing (which wasn't often) The only time I had any real success with this pedal otherwise was playing power chords at earbleed levels (7 to be exact) through an old breakup-prone Super Reverb (with reverb at 1-2)with comp-cut off. Hit the boost channel, hit a "d" chord, and BLANG! the bite was FINALLY somewhat evident. But I play mostly small-to-medium sized clubs, not football stadiums, so this little discovery would ultimately prove to be quite worthless.
Reliability
:
8
This pedal could withstand a nuclear attack
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with Mr. Fuller, probably wouldn't want to.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I've been playing out regularly in bands for about four years, been in and out of different musical situations for about seven overall. I've used overdrives and distortions by MXR, Tech 21, Boss, and now Fulltone. All were equally second rate. I just bought a ts-10 tubescreamer and am VERY content with it so far, but may seek out the Carl Martin Heavy Drive in future. Overall, the FD2 to me was a White Elephant that did nothing to improve my sound. This blues hippie/huckster Fuller should be strung up for conceiving this sadly underachieving one-dimensional pedal. Seems as though a lot of people rate Fulltone high, but then again, lots of guitar players are unaware that they sound like shit, right? These are usually Kenny Wayne Shepherd clones who waste their lives chasing the ghosts of SRV and Hendrix. Get a life, Fuller.
Product: Fulltone Full-Drive 2
Price Paid: US $200
Submitted 06/08/2003
at 12:00am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
It's an easy pedal to work. This new switch thing is a fucking joke... i tried it with several amps including mesa's, mashall plexi's, BF'd fenders and a couple of matchless's... THERE IS BARELY AND I MEAN BARELY ANY (AND I MEAN ON A SCALE TO 1 -10 IT'S LIKE A 0.5) FUCKING TONE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MIDS AND FLAT-MIDS!!!!!
Sound Quality
:
1
I do own a few of fulltone's units but this thing just sucks... too muddy, i can get a better tone out of a boss sd-1 and a sound tank ts-5. it's so much easier and beter to use a couple of Maxon OD-808's, and it's more transparent, with out losing the gain... 18V adapter to make it transparent but lose a little gain, fuck that...
Reliability
:
8
do get me wrong it built like an old sherman tank, it just has a shitty sound.
Customer Support
:
10
mike's a nice guy, i just think he needs to try again in the overdrive dept.
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
I returned it.... I like my klon over this anyday!!!!!!it's hard to do an overall rating because it's biult well, and mike's a nice guy, it's just a shitty sounding pedal. and this is just my opinion, and i know 95% of the people out there wouldn't agree with me but that's okay...
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