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MXR Distortion II

Summary
Similar Products MXR M-80 Bass Direct Box with Distortion @ Musician's Friend
MXR Custom Audio Electronics MC-401 Boost Pedal @ Musician's Friend
MXR M173 Silicon Fuzz Guitar Effects Pedal @ Musician's Friend
Manufacturer URL http://www.jimdunlop.com/
Ease of Use 9.1 (20 responses)
Sound Quality 9.3 (20 responses)
Reliability 9.8 (17 responses)
Customer Support 8.3 (6 responses)
Overall Rating 9.5 (19 responses)
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Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 07/14/2008 at 01:21am by Greg

Ease of Use : 10
I have had my MXR Dist. II for about 11 years. I had tried several distortion pedals from tube driven monsters (Matchless) to the script-logo Distortion +, Tube Screamers, Boss, as well as an Orange Color-Sound Power Boost (a monster!). None of them are as flexible for lead playing as the Distortion II. If you want to play long-sustained lines with or without much fuzz, it can do it. If you want to get more crunch and have it respond to your picking dynamics, it can do it.




Sound Quality : 10
The best thing about this pedal is that you have much more control over your low-end than most distortion pedals. This is why I like it so much. Even if you're playing clean rhythm parts, when you step on it, it doesn't cancel out your bottom. In addition, it doesn't sound as muddy as some of the 'bottom enhancer pedals' such as the Color-Sound or the Big Muff (pedals which I also like). But yet it is dark and you can boost your lows if you want. I have used it with an SG and a 335, so I don't know if it would be as dark with a strat.

I also like the way it integrates it's tone with an amp's tone. Many distortion pedals do not accomplish this. I've read how well it responds to Marshalls, and I can tell you how they work with Fenders: Very, very good! I have a '65 blackface Vibrolux and if I have it on 5-8, the Dist.II seems like it was engineered for this amp when I go to leads. Perfect, and won't feedback and garble too much. I keep the resonance down for leads but depending on your style, you may like to have some bite here. It's a very sensitive control and doesn't taketh, only giveth.

Reliability : 7
My only complaints are the 3-pronged plug, which leads to my main complaint: noise! Nobody on this thread has had problems with noise? I have with mine, at times. I live in San Francisco and play clubs with questionable outlets, that's for sure. Lifted the ground at times, still unpredictable. I had the plug removed and mounted it on a board with a central power-supply which helped. But still a bit unpredictable with noise which is the only reason I gave it 7.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No need for customer support. You could throw this thing off a skyscraper and use it at a gig later. I've never had the foot-switch cleaned and no pops or noise when I step on it. Assuming the person who had it before I bought it never cleaned it, that's going on 25 plus years. Even if a clerk at the shop blew-it down, that's going on 11 years without any problems.

Overall Rating : 10
The 3-pronged plug and electrical outlet sensitivity don't take away from the tone. This is a serious lead guitar pedal and it's versatility is only outdone by it's ability to mesh with different amplification (something most pedals can't do). It is also very sensitive to toggle switching, even on heavier crunch settings.

I would rate this as one of the best distortion pedals for lead guitar. In fact, I have not heard a better one with Fender Amps.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 03/30/2008 at 09:24pm by Mark Wood
Email: mayuewu at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 7
It's easy enough to get a good sound out of it, but if you spend some time tweaking the knobs you can get a much better sound. The The manual says the Resonance control is for an overdriven speaker sound, but it's kinda lame. The Filter doesn't do much either.

Sound Quality : 9
For most of the settings, you get a very synthetic tone, similar to the MXR Distortion +. But if you crank up the Output control, you get a very raucous sound, like the classic Hendrix tone, but with more balls! Very little noise.

Reliability : 10
It's an MXR.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Unfortunately Jim Dunlop never reissued this one, so you're on your own!

Overall Rating : 9
It blows away the Distortion +. Great for lead tones. But rhythm playing gets kinda raspy sounding. Still, it's one of the best solid state distortion pedals ever made. Probably not worth the price though. And good luck on finding it!


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 05/25/2007 at 08:07am by Marcus

Ease of Use : 10
Quite easy. Certainly it is not very difficult to dial a good sound with this pedal.

Sound Quality : 9
The sound of this pedal is awesome. I use it together with a Boss Cs3 modified by Pedaldoc (probably the best compressor I have ever used) and I can get the sound of Tommi Iommi very easily.

Reliability : 10
Impossible to break? Yeah...I would say so

Customer Support : No Opinion
No problems with the pedal yet and let??s hope I never have to contact the customer support guys.

Overall Rating : 9
Amazing pedal. Good distortion and very dependable. I would buy another one it if got stolen.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 01/16/2007 at 06:23pm by MJK

Ease of Use : 9
Easy enough, though the active bass boost is has a vague name-resonance.
I???m hard to please and when I find something I like, I stick with it and stay happy for a very long time. I play what I call ???rock-metal???, basically old school Van Halen sounding stuff and some lighter pop metal and occasional heavy blues type stuff. I like a tone that I can set and forget and just play wherever inspiration takes me. My rig is this pedal, phase 90 script logo (worth every penny), heavily modded DOD 308, all run out a loop master passive switcher into Marshall 1987x with post phase inverter master volume, an old Hush and Eventide H-3000D/SX in the loop into vintage Marshall 412. With this rig I could play in a Van Halen tribute band one night, an Yngwie tribute band the next and a Larry Carlton band the next.

Sound Quality : 9
I stumbled onto this little sleeper in a local used music store, plugged it into a little combo amp with a junk guitar and knew right away I found my perfect distortion pedal. No, it didn???t turn that combo amp into a roaring, growling, singing, barking Marshall, but it turned my Marshall 1987 into a roaring, growling, singing, barking Marshall! There are lots of great sounding boutique pedals these days, but compared to this, most sound like they are trying too hard to get noticed. Tonally, this one is practically invisible, it just sounds like my amp with a very well voiced and versatile gain mod. It???s a bit more raw and blistering than a tube screamer but not a buzz box either and much more full from top to bottom. It sounds great with single coils or humbuckers. There is NO honky midrange, NO sucked out midrange or weird notched tones, NO disappearing low e string and NO synthetic plastic sizzle in the highs. I would have paid an amp mod guru a thousand dollars and been thrilled to have had my Marshall come back sounding like it does with this pedal. I kid you not. The distortion has just the right balance of smooth sustain and stinging grit. Inside, you???ll find all the vintage op amps the pedal gurus rave about and for good reason. With the output on 10, you get what seems to be a very modest boost, enough to slip into my Marshall and set off a sex bomb but without sounding like WW3. With my EVH equipped Charvel and playing like I mean it, I get very, very close to early Van Halen tones. With my Strat, I can get very convincing Yyngwie approved singing sustain, though I tend to use my 308 more for the latter because the HS-3???s are very cold sounding pick ups that match up better with the more midrange forward tone of my 308. The resonance knob was very smartly conceived because unlike other pedals that sneak in an active bass boost, this one is strictly additive only. Turn it all the way down and you just have flat response, not sucked out bass. Thus you are not stuck with an active bass circuit in the signal path unless you want it. I keep the drive at 11:00, tone about the same and get a wonderfully uncompressed rock-metal tone with perfect sustain, not too much, not too little.

Reliability : 10
They don't build them like this anymore. The box feels like solid steel and the knobs work perfect without a trace of scratch...26 years later.

Customer Support : No Opinion
The old MXR is long gone, unfortunately for all of us.

Overall Rating : 10
The shear neutrality of this pedal will not please all players, and I???m not calling it a ???Marshall in a box??? because it isn???t. If you want the sound I describe, you have to play it into a properly tuned up old Marshall with appropriate guitar, pickups and cab. The usual disclaimer applies: It???s no magic wand for bad sounding guitars, bad sounding amps or bad players who use their gear for scape goats. Snap one up before they get discovered and you???ll thank me. It stays right with me under my fingers, never steps on my toes and never lags behind.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: 180 (Euro) used
Submitted 05/01/2005 at 04:24pm by Luigi le fou
Email: mr<dot>bluebox at libero<dot>it

Ease of Use : 9
9

Drive,Resonance (bass ma non solo),Filter (tono),Output (volume)
Con facilita ottieni dei suoni molto versatili

Sound Quality : 10

Uso una testata Peavey MX-130 degli anni '80 ed una cassa 4x12" Fender Roc-Pro
Come chitarre ho una Jazzmaster Japan ed una Telecaster Squier custom con texas special.
Pedalame: Boss TU-2,Ibanez GE-601 (equlizzatore),MXR BlueBox vintage,MXR Distortion II,Sovtek Big Muff (green),Ibanez AD-80 (vintage) ed EHX Stereo Slap Back Echo

Questo e il miglior distorsore che abbia mai avuto!!! Non lo scambierei con nulla...
Una dinamica pazzesca.. Solo col tocco puoi passare da un suono morbido ad uno aggressivo.

Per me questo e il miglior distorsore che sia mai stato costruito!!!!

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : 10
Nessun problema,anzi,il mio e usato ed un precedente propietario ha fatto un lavoro sull'alimentazioni a regola d'arte stabilizzandolo perfettamente evitando i rischi dell'alimentazione continua.

Overall Rating : 8
Suono IndieRockNoise ecc...
Ce l'ho da quasi un anno ed e sempre stato sulla mia pedaliera come titolare fisso senza mai rischiare il posto :-)
Ogni tanto penso di prendermene uno di scorta perche senza sarei rovinato...

L'unica pecca e che ha un volume d'uscita non altissimo...ma una volta abituatisi e una meraviglia
Nessun pedale distorsore si puo paragonare a questo MXR


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $150
Submitted 03/11/2005 at 04:52am by niccolo zanotelli
Email: niczano<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy to use; two knobs for drive and output(volume), one for resonance and one for filter. About first two I've nothing to report, they are like the other pedals, about filter I can say that I don't understand the utility of this: if it's at the list is unlistenable, so I think max is the best. About resonance I can say it's very very intresting knob. it turn on not only basses but also the power of that.
I bought it used so I haven't any manual.
The years of building of it is 1982.

Sound Quality : 10
It's FANTASTIC.

I use it with: Gibson Les Paul Gold Top 1979, Orange ad30 with cabinet 4x12.

Sound:

Fuzz: is better than the other fuzz I tryed (like coloursound,vox, etc.) because is warm like them but much much more controllable. It's not noisy.

Distortion\overdrive: very DEEP, strong and clear. Treble with a lot of substein (very long sound), basses very very strong, middle not so clear like treble but it's a feature of all the pedals of that period.

I don't know about others pedals to compare it I can say that sometimes the sound seems to be similar for esemple to Jimmy pages's guitar in Communication breackdown, but it is opinable!

At the end I repeat: IT'S FANTASTIC

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion
Mxr doesn't exsist more.
Jim Dunlop produce some pedals that once was produce by Mxr but NOT DISTORTION II.

Overall Rating : 10
I play Hard Rock and Blues, in Led Zeppelin Style.
I play since 1996, with mxr dist II since 2003.
Mxr dist II is better than: all Boss box, coloursond tone bender, electro harmonix big muff, ibanez ts9, and vox fuzz.
I choosed it becouse I listened it from a friend of mines.
I love: all
I hate: nothing
Best feature: SOUND

SORRY FOR MY ORRIBLE ENGLISH, BUT I'M ITALIAN


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $250 used
Submitted 08/10/2004 at 05:52pm by Tone man

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy to get a good sound from it. The knobs allow for treble and bass control along with drive and output. Manual is easy to read and offers some basic setups for different types of tones.

Sound Quality : 9
Very bassy with enough low end for anyone. If your amp doesnt have the thunder than this will surely help. Also can be used as an input gain control. Crank the output and lower the gain. Very warm and an all analog signal is what distinguishes these pedals from the digital gear of today. I even use it for the blues. What a great SRV and Hendrix sound I get from it. Use the neck pickups for this. I dont know of any piece of gear thats a perfect 10. Well maybe...

Reliability : 10
Built like a brickhouse. This is all steel construction not plastic or aluminum. If you drop this on your foot you will know it! Thick power chord too. I think this can never break. Its bomb proof!

Customer Support : No Opinion
Not sure because pedals from MXR usually dont breakdown.

Overall Rating : 9
Great for all types of hard rock and blues. Its very flexible and sounds terrific. I can get sounds from the 60's through the 90's with this thing. Its very natural sounding. Warm highs not brittle.All you need is a good tube, Marshall amp. Forget the Mesa and the boutique amps (except for Soldano) at least for hard rock styles. Would always want one on my pedalboard. Wish it had a mid shift button but thats what my MXR eq is for anyway. Blows away the doubleshot distortion! If you find one, buy it and ask questions later. Very easy to get rid of because it has been used by Eddie V, Randy Rhoads, and Billy Corgan to name a few.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 06/24/2004 at 11:58am by JEC

Ease of Use : 9
Pretty easy to use. This is not my one knob MXR Phase 90, which would get a 10 for ease of use. This pedal has four knobs: drive, resonance, filter, output. I haven't found the resonance or filter controls to be particularly senstivie, but you can get dial in a great tone with this pedal with a bit of patience.

Sound Quality : 9
My purpose for writing this review is narrow: If you have a JCM 900 and are unhappy with the tone (like I was for about 12 years) try this pedal in front of the amp.

My setup is simple: Peavey Wolfgang or a late 80's Steinberger with Trans-Trem into MXR II direct into JCM 900 on the B channel. I add a wee bit of reverb from the amp head. My tone controls on the Marshall are basically mid-scooped, no mids, treble at about 1:00 o'clock, bass to taste (usually around 2:00 o'clock but this has to be watched due to the amount of bottom end added by the MXR) and a small amount of presence. I run the preamp knob to about 12:00 o'clock, much past that and the tone gets muddy with the MXR Distortion II in place. On the amp head, I pulled the 2 inside tubes, placed in some JJ EL-34s, cut the output switch to low, switched the speaker output to 8 ohms, and then turned that shit up! I wanted to keep this rig as tonally pure as possible, so I don't use any other effects or amp attenuation devices -- translation, even with two power tubes in the low setting this set-up is LOUD. My cab is a 1960A.

The Sound? To my ears, great. The tone is distinctive, but versatile enough to cover rock and metal. The MXR Distortion II makes this amp thick and adds a lot of bottom. Sustain and harmonics are vastly improved over the stock amp. The tone is not fuzz and it is not exactly metallic souding like a Boss metal zone. It is a very full, gutsy distortion. With judicious use of the master volume (meaning cranked past 2 o'clock) the pedal interacts with the amp such that sustained notes slide gently into a very musical feedback. Wow.

I can't say that this set-up sounds like (insert name of favorite guitarist) because it really doens't. I can best describe the tone by saying it is a mix of old Metallica / Van Halen / Scorpions. I imagine if I had a serious EQ pre-distortion and post-distortion, I could get really zero in on a particular tone.

I should also add that I do not run the drive on the pedal all the way up. It is set at about 10:00 o'clock. Much past that and in comes the mud. My output on the pedal is wide open and the resonance and filter are about 2:00 o'clock. I have not found that this pedal introduces any significant degree of noise to the signal.

I did not give this pedal a 10 because I was unable to find a good tone through the Marshall clean channel. I also ran it through a Peavey Classic 50 (which has many similar tonal characteristics to the 900). The sound in those instances was too fuzzy and dark for my tastes.

Reliability : 10
The pedal is a 1982 and is still in great condition. The previous owners took care of it. Although it has some minor dents and dings, none of the pots are scratchy. I compared this pedal to a new MXR chorus pedal that I have. Night and day. The Distortion II is as solid as a pedal could be. The knobs are large and the foot switch feels unbreakable. The drive and output knobs still have the original sleeve on them -- I have read these are there so you can adjust these switches with your feet during a gig! I haven't tried that but it is a cool feature nonetheless. If you are in the market for one of these pedals, make sure it has both sleeves. The output jack on my pedal is a bit worn -- but it is 22 years old, so no big deal. In contrast, my new MXR chorus pedal (Jim Dunlop) feels cheap. The knobs are small and the jacks and footswitch feel brittle.

If you are buying this pedal sight unseen, beware that its power source is a heavy duty three prong power cord. No 9 volts or wall warts here.

Customer Support : 3
I do not know if Jim Dunlop will service these old pedals, but I have a Rockman X100 that I sent back to the factory for repair quite some time ago. So far, althogh they agreed to fix it, they do not seem particularly concerned about actually repairing it or returning my emails. If this pedal needs repair, it is going elsewhere.

Overall Rating : 10
For my particular application, this pedal gets a 10. My JCM 900 has a new lease on life. This was not a plug and play match, though. There is a definite sweet spot that required precise adjusting of the pedal in conjunction with the amp. I would expect that this pedal could be used with other high gain tube amps that need more punch.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $200 used
Submitted 07/24/2003 at 12:55am by Drew

Ease of Use : 7
4 Knobs-Gain, Resonance (Bass), Filter (A Hybrid Midrange/Presence Control), and Output.

This is a fairly easy device to use, particularly after you get a feeling for the filter control. It is very unique and cool.

The lack of battery operation can be a pain, but it has its purpose. It also becomes annoying to deal with another wall wart and cable when setting up, but its not big deal.

I would say that ease of use is just above average. 7

Sound Quality : 9
My rig relies only on the MXR distortion for signal coloration. I have run it through a plethora of tube amps, but I feel that the direct rig I describe below gets me the best tone.

Stratocaster w/ Dimarzio PAF Pro in Bridge
MXR Distortion II
Hughes and Kettner Red Box Pro for Speaker Cabinet Emulation
Mixing Board

The tone is fantastic. Incredible Clarity. Very smooth and organic with lots of chunk, crunch, and additude. Very much like a Vintage Marshall or orange amp.



With the gain set higher, I was able to achieve a tone that I would describe as a higher quality sex pistols tone. Very brown and tasty with a great midrange and bite. Lots of additude! Fat and smooth with clarity! It compresses just right so that some squish is available when you pick right correctly. Artificial harmonics are very cool with the gain set high. There is a noticeable lack of buzz and fizz even on the highest gain settings. Interestingly, I recently came across a magazine article in which a picture very clearly showed the MXR Distortion II on Eddie Van Halen's pedal board. Truthfully, I could care less about Eddie's rig, but I am in the minority. Email me for the pic if you want it.

With the gain set around 12:00, AC/DC tone is unavoidable. When direct it is not as organic as the Young brothers, but when I plugged my les paul with the Rio Grande BBQ Bucker (Used By Angus)into a Sovtek Mig with EL34's, I got shivers. By working the filter knob between 12:00 and 1:30, I could achieve any tone from any AC/DC album. The picking dynamics were incredible!

I have also used this pedal as a clean boost on tube amps, and it sounds fantastic. There is only a slight gain boost, but the way in which the pedal adds sustain and rearranges the equalization makes the amp sound very heavy, even when set fairly clean.

This pedal is exceptionally transparent and dynamic. It will really bring out the character of the guitar and player that plugs into it.
With the low output humbuckers that I use in my strat, I can very clearly hear the difference in small things such as string age or pick shape when I play throught the mxr d2. Conversely, My friend plugged in his EMG axe, and it sounded very compressed and sterile. This is not necessarily a bad thing! I do not care for it, but this tone has its place. The point is that this pedal augmented every aspect of the guitar and player that went through it.

There was also much more gain availible when playing guitars with high output pickups. Where I dime the gain on the D2 with the dimarzios, I set it considerably less than halfway with pickups that have alot of output.

I feel that this pedal deserves a 10, but I have never played a fulltone, menatone, chandler, klon, etc., so I would feel very ignorant to give it a superlative rating. I do know, however, that this has blown away every other pedal and amplifier that I have ever played.


Reliability : No Opinion
I do not know the reliability, and I hope never to test it. It looks very solid however, and I would imagine that if you treat it reasonably well, it would be just fine. I would not take it on tour without a backup, unless I had a custom case for the mini-rig that I am using now. Just do not be stupid and take it apart.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Dunlop needs to make a GOOD reissue of this incredible pedal. You guys hear me! I would buy 3, no kidding!

Anyway, I doubt they would be of any help at all on a pedal that they have had nothing to do with.

Overall Rating : 9
I play a very original style that I spent about 2 years developing. The tone needs to be exceptionally clear, because I play many jazz chords that cannot be jumbled! However, it also needs to be crunchy enough to do chugga chugga "bark at the moon" style riffing at the same time, and it needs to sound very intense and cutting for my solos! This pedal does it for me. I would feel very ignorant to give this a 10 before putting it next to some of the great pedals that are hitting the market every day. There might be another pedal out there that defeats this, but I have yet to hear it! If you want clips of this doing device doing any number of things, feel free to shoot me an email!


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $20
Submitted 07/14/2003 at 02:45pm by ST

Ease of Use : 9
Easy to find a good sound out of it. The resonance and filter options make it more personal than most distortion boxes that typically have just a volume, distortion, and tone knob. This pedal allows for a unique, less generic distortion

Sound Quality : 10
I play a 1978 Guild S-60 solidbody electric with a 70's super distortion pickup, run through either a late 60's Guild Thunder I (Practice) or early 70's Fender Super Reverb (Rehearsal/Gig) amp. This is the best distortion pedal I have owned, period. Like one reviewer said before, it really acts and sounds much more like an overdrive than a distortion pedal. Because both my tube amps have no built in overdrive, over the years I have owned a Z VEX Super Hard-On, Vintage RAT, Japanese Boss DS-1 and DS-2, Boss Blues Driver, Big Muff, Marshall Bluesbreaker II, Ibanez TS-9 and TS-10, and a few other dist/od boxes looking for a great dirty sound. I got this one on a whim for $20 with a vintage gear hook-up I have, and it kicks all those other pedals asses. VERY warm sounding, evem with the dirt maxed. It stays on at all times, and I use the guitar volume to clean things up when necessary. It's a keeper, and finally no need to try any other OD pedals.

Reliability : 9
At first I hated the notion that it worked off a plug and not a battery, but after a few months when I realized I wanted it on at all times and didn't need it in front of me, it just stays on top of the amp and plugs in with it. The plug makes it very reliable since there is no change in tone with a weakening battery. So far, switch and jacks have held up perfect. It's a solid stompbox.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had to deal with it.

Overall Rating : 10
I've played guitar for 15 years now, and I highly recommend this pedal for guitar players with good ears who play hard rock/blues. It's a GREAT overall rock and roll pedal that can give a good sounding tube amp balls. For a vintage clean amp that requires an OD/Distortion pedal for gain, this gives me the best dirty sound I have heard. Remember - it's all in your hands anyway, gear is an afterthought.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 11/19/2002 at 11:18am by Roy Boltz
Email: bolt_upright77<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : No Opinion
I tried & tried & I cant get a good sound from this box.

Sound Quality : No Opinion
Ive tried just boosting my tube amp,Ive tried using the distortion,I think maybe there is something wrong with it cause mine sounds like shit.I see they are getting alot of good reveiws but mine sounds horrible,I think I'll have someone look at it.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
If mine is working properly, I'll give it a thumbs down.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $230 used
Submitted 11/16/2002 at 02:28pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
This is a very minimalistic pedal for the amounts of tones it gets. I have yet to find a bad tone for one genre or another. Its really easy for me because I just turn everything up to 10.

Sound Quality : 10
Holy Shit. I am using this with my Warmoth Humbucker telecaster with the Iommi and a Sovtek Mig 50 with a THD reactive rectifier.

This is a really really really great pedal. I max out everthing and get the perfect sound for me. Its really articulate. It dosent have the normal squashed sound that most distortion boxes do such as losing definition and getting lost in the mix, but it has the benefits, such as a good palm mute and a smooth sound with sustain. With my setup, I am able to get really great original tone. I wouldn't compare this sound to any amp I have ever heard, except for maybe for a JCM 800 2204, if it was tube rectified. But it seems to be even more articulate and fuller than that.

Reliability : 10
Built Great
I would use it without a backup, but I want another just in case.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Yeah right. The company when kashploosh.

Overall Rating : 10
I play in a punk/garage/new wave/nick drake/reggae/jazz/zepplin band. I have been playing guitar for 6 years. If it were stolen I would buy as many as I could get my hands on. I would also steal alot of them. They are getting really really expensive, however. Mine was. I love that I can get it to sound like anything, and that everthing sounds great. It really helps me make music because it is just the sound I am going for, and it is simple.


I would NOT recommend this pedal for modern metal. It sounds too good.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $100 used
Submitted 07/31/2002 at 03:27pm by Patrick

Ease of Use : 9
The MXR Distortion II is like the more common MXR Distortion+,but with four knobs instead of two. They are in this order: Drive, Resonance, Filter, Output.

Sound Quality : 10
My setup is as follows: 70's Strat reissue into the MXR Distortion II into a Vox AC15TBX amp. I was using a Boss SD-1 overdrive pedal that sounded quite good, but the MXR Distortion II took my overdrive to another level. By that, I don't mean it necessarily has more overdrive, it just means that because of the Filter and Resonance, I have a wide range of sounds I can dial in, emulating anything from an Ibanez Tube Screamer to a full on distortion box. Since someone here was kind enough to share his favorite setting, here is mine: 2 o'clock, 1 o'clock, 4 o'clock, 5 o'clock. As said, the different overdrives and distortions I can dial in with this unit is simply incredible. I can perfectly emulate the overdrive/distortion guitar sounds from classic 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s rock bands. This pedal really is timeless. The only thing it can't do is fuzz, but that's what Big Muffs and Big Cheeses are for, right? :) I play rock for the most part, but I had a friend over who plays only blues and he was completely blown away. While the MXR Distortion II is called a "Distortion" pedal, to me, it really is an overdirve, as you can set it so that when you hit the strings softly, you get a clean tone rich in harmonics and overtones, and as you hit the strings harder, you get a dirtier sound. Whereas "Distortion" boxes sound distorted no matter how hard or soft you hit the strings. So for players who value their dynamics, you get a searing guitar sound without the overcompression that usually accompanies distortion pedals.

Reliability : 10
As someone here said, you could hammer nails with this box all day and take it out to a gig in the evening and all will be well. This box is solidly built. I don't need a backup with this box, but I would love to have another one just for the sake of it. Of course, these pedals are getting very hard to find. Mine is in quite good condition with a few character scratches that actually makes it look really nice, definitely has that vintage 70's vibe, and I love it!

Customer Support : No Opinion
MXR went belly-up a long time ago and somehow, I doubt that the Jim Dunlop-owned company would support this pedal, nor would I expect them to.

Overall Rating : 10
As said, I play mostly rock, and this pedal is the best overdrive/distortion pedal I have ever owned/tried/used. And the list of pedals I've had experience with is quite extensive (ie. Ibanez TS-9, TS-9 w/808 mod, Boss BD-2 Blues Driver, Jeckyll & Hyde, Route 66, Boss OD-1, Boss SD-1, Boss OD-3, SansAmp). I noticed something interesting as a personal observation, that for some reason, to my ears, TS-9's sound great with Fender amps and horrible with Marshall/Vox amps, whereas the Boss SD-1 sounds great with Marshall/Vox amps and horrible with Fender amps. But the MXR Distortion II sounds great with both Fender and Marshall/Vox type amps. Being a producer above being a guitar player, I have very high standards when it comes to tone, and while I'm still not a great guitar player (been a keyboard player for over 10 years), I do have a definite opinion of what sounds good (and hopefully an informed one). If this box were lost or stolen, I would definitely get another one. In fact, if I can find one for a good deal at some point, I'd like to have a backup but as said, these once-neglected gems are being discovered. Billy Corgan has been playing with one lately, which has generated renewed interest and enthusiasm for this pedal and as a result, has really upped the going rate on the D2. For quite awhile, I played my Strat straight into my Vox amp, and I'm very particular about what goes into my chain. The MXR Distortion II has earned its place in my chain.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $150 used
Submitted 05/02/2002 at 05:12pm by DanielE

Ease of Use : 9
4 knobs. Turn up, turn down. Sound comes out. Easy!

Sound Quality : 9
This is one groovy distortion unit. The tone is superior to, and far more tweakable than my Distiotion+. This is one distortion that does not wreck your tone but really works *with* it to produce a very workable, stable and repeatable tone(s). My "trick" to really making this sound awesome is this: (optional)Compressor >>DistortionII >>a Zoom PD01 clean boost/overdrive. I assume any good OD/Boost would work. I know some FX chain gurus want the distortion after the OD but for me, the OD after the Dist. , beefs it up and removes the bit of *raspiness* you typically get from a distortion. My chain is thus: (Franken)Strat>wah>Dyna Comp>Dist II>Zoom OD > Tube Amp >>line out>>MXR Green Analog Delay>(sometimes)Line6 Filter Mod>Ibanez CS9 chorus>>EH Delux Mem Man >> Solid State Amp. Sound good?? Oh yeah! The combination of the Dist II and the Zoom OD are near the end of my search for OD and dist. The both sound great, alone or together, and with them I get most of the tones I need.

Reliability : 10
I hammer nails with it every day and then gig all night....

Customer Support : 10
Gave MXR a 10 here, thanks for the memories, guys!

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Seems the word has gotten out about these, as you can see the prices are going up up up. This is the one distortion I ever owned (and I've owned quite a few: I bought my original Dist+ in 1974!), and it's the only one that seems to always work right. Sometimes I have to tweak the rubber-booted knobs on the fly to get more gain or less drive etc, but this unit is just smooth, sweet, and nasty as you want it to be!


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $159
Submitted 12/02/2001 at 12:17am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
With four knobs - it's easy to get a sound. I usually leave mine at the following settings:
Drive - 11-12 o'clock
Resonance - 10 o'clock
Filter - 2 o'clock
Output - 3 o'clock

this has worked for me in a Music Man 410 RD, an ADA MP1, a Mesa Boogie V-Twin, and a Fender SF Princeton. Great sound!

Sound Quality : 10
since I bought this new back in the early 80's, I've used this with a bunch of different amps and it has worked really well for me in a Music Man 410 RD, an ADA MP1, a Mesa Boogie V-Twin, and a Fender SF Princeton. Great sound!

Reliability : 10
I've never had a backup for this, and with its own AC cord, you never have to worry about a battery going dead. I haven't had any problems with switches or jacks, and I've had mine now for a while..

Customer Support : 10
MXR was around when I bought it, but has since been Chapter 11; some employees went on to found ART Technologies, and Jim Dunlop bought the assets and makes some of the pedals still. I've thought of having a true bypass added, but no real burning need.

Overall Rating : 10
I play garage rock - everything from Green Day to the Who to Zep to Talking heads. I like the sound of the Distortion II as well as its ease of use - the rubber speed knobs let you change your settings with your foot without having to kneel down while you're playing!

At the time I bought it back in 1982, I was using a Univox Super Fuzz, which I got rid of for some reason. Now they're collector items... but where the Super Fuzz had the ratty distortion thing going for it, the MXR's is smoother, which I prefer - it's a little different from everyone that's out there.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: (TRADED FOR MUFF) used
Submitted 03/25/2001 at 01:34pm by SHANE
Email: PIGZEPLIN at CS<dot>COM

Ease of Use : 10
Anybody can figure this one out.

Sound Quality : 8
Super Greenday sound, I use it with a 94 strat or a Generic 70's tele, through a tube mace 212 or sunn half stack. I went from a green muff to this & I still prefer the muff. But still very cool. YEAH it's noisy, but what the fun in a quite pedal? EXCELLENT GREENDAY SOUND, AWSOME FOR FOR PUNK!!

Reliability : 10
Mine looks like it's been to hell & back but it still works perfectly. I never gig with a backup anything cept guitars.

Customer Support : No Opinion
NEVER NEEDED IT!

Overall Rating : 10
I play, Stuff like Nirvana, the presidents, Smashing pumpkins, sonic youth, greenday & such. Good enough match, I don't care I just want feedback. Ive been playing for 5 years, I own a few other fuzzboxs & such, lots of guitars, amps, & drums, to much to list. IF IT WAS STOLEN OR LOST I WOULD NEVER FIND ANOTHER. I would prob just fall back on a muff. I wish i had a furr coat........


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: (I traded a big muff for it)
Submitted 03/20/2001 at 04:35pm by Frank M. Brigandi

Ease of Use : 8
4 knobs pretty simple, volume, resonance, filter, distortion. No major complications here, I just turn the filter up all the way and turn the resonance all the way down, distortion is at 1:00 and the volume is set to taste (2:00). I use a bassman and i love this harvest gold box. I've had it since I was in high school some 17 years ago, and wouldn't trade it for anything.

Sound Quality : 10
Well, I primarily use this, I have a slew of distortion units, and this one is my benchmark for tone, i.e.; clarity, distortion and overall tarnsparency, I have used this for all types of music from Heavy metal to country. It never seems to "not fit" into a style, or tone category. My only problem, is finding a backup incase this one happens to die or disapear on me.

Reliability : 10
had the input and out put jacks replace once, thats it. This box has been everywhere in the country and europe, zip-tied to a Maple (nitro coated of course) pedal board, and I've nevr had a problem with it.

Customer Support : 10
Well, I can't actually give a rating on this, I own a few old MXR effects and have nevr had to call C.S. for anything. So, I would have to guess that they either are very good or are going postal, like the Maytag man on T.V.

Overall Rating : 10
This is my most prized possesion. Not because It's a vintage pedal (I don't get into that), but because I've had this for literally decades and it has never failed me and is incredibly versatile.. country heavy metal, pop, funk, anything.. I wish MXR would re-issue one so I could get a back-up.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 05/24/2000 at 09:31am by matt
Email: mrno419<at>aol dot com

Ease of Use : 10
awesome pedal, always wanted one, got one and stil loved it,i paid 145$ for mine, buts its in mint condition and with orginal box and manual... the distorion+ has been associated with randy rhoades, but he actually used the D2, if u want to hear what this pedal sounds like,listen to the ozzy tribute album to randy, and thats it,little noisy,easy to use,great fat distorion, i also recomend the big yellow chorus(not the micro)from MXR and the purple or grey flangers<(not reissued!!! versions

Sound Quality : 10

Reliability : 10

Customer Support : 7

Overall Rating : 10


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $90 used
Submitted 09/28/1999 at 04:59am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 9
I paid $90 for mine...they are getting harder to find. Very easy to get a good tone...highs all the way up, bass control off...distortion setting 1/2 way up.

Sound Quality : 10
I can't believe the reviewer who said this unit sounds like a distortion +.....its not even close! 2 totally diff. pedals. I'm using this through an AC-30 and Mesa Mark3 used in sterio. This is a great pedal for getting close to the SRV sound. The thing is noisy sometimes but usally a ground lifter solves the problem completely.

Reliability : 10
Its old, still works ...although the switch on mine(I think) is starting to go...no biggy, I'll just replace the switch. Its been very reliable, no backup as they are not that easy to find anymore.

Customer Support : No Opinion
na

Overall Rating : 9
I play blues rock and I could not do any of the SRV songs without this pedal. It gives a beautifully transparent shimmering overdrive that I use 60% of the time. Its sounds exceptionally excellent when I switch the Boogie over to my Fender Vibratone(leslie) cab, and run it sterio with the AC30


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $43 used
Submitted 01/09/1999 at 11:13pm by bor
Email: b-o-r<at>usa dot net

Ease of Use : 8
it's a stompbox. the only reason i'd knock a couple points off the rating is for the metal zone crowd. (thanks guys! your MT-2 reviews are real good for a late-night laugh, although not as amusing as the ones for the DOD death metal.) takes a bit of tinkering to get a great sound... although good and simply OK sounds are there right out of the box. (as was my experience.)

Sound Quality : 7
i've used this thing primarily with my SF fender deluxe reverb and bandmaster and have run both my hamer special FM and T-51 tele copy through it. what i was expecting from this box was a distortion+ with a bit more flexibility. but the sound of my particular unit is VERY different. this ended up being a positive thing. in general i find it to be less harsh and fuzzy than the dist+, more rat-like in nature. it's also far more flexible than a D+, not just because of the added filter and resonance knobs, but because it's a more organic sounding pedal. i think a lot more of the natural tone of the axe comes through. husker du never would have/could have sounded the same if bob had been running through one of these "upgrades--" close, maybe. but to be honest, i'd find a lot of their SST records more listenable if they *had* used this.
the pedal is shockingly versatile-- but within limits. it depends on how much noise you're willing to deal with. setting the gain up high produces a very crunchy, tasty sound. unfortunately, it also produces a sh*tload of hum and noise-- far more than my block-logo D+ at full crank. i don't know if this is particular to mine, if it's particular to the wall sockets here (i wish this thing had a 9V battery socket-- i *hate* being hardwired to 120VAC), or whatever. i would *love* to use this sound, but i just can't at present, as i need a noise floor of zero, or close to it, baby. i'm looking into either building my own, with 9V circuitry if possible, or seeing what i can mod inside the box to kill off some o' that noise.
where the pedal utterly astonished me is with the gain turned to about 11 o'clock or below. it's a *very* juicy, natural overdrive-- heavier than a TS808 but more realistic than a rat (my favorite pedal of all time up until now-- but now it's a hard call). it's absolutely perfect for ringing, dissonant chords (go ahead and throw in that Ab flat-9 sharp-11 chord), and very touch-sensitive-- you can follow up a sweet, tender solo with some blistering, just-on-the-edge power chord banging. it's just synthetic enough to push my old silverfaces into the modern age but definitely not grating or annoying. i can't speak for bluesmen, but i consider this to be the ultimate in lower-gain "indie tone," perfect for everything from pavement to neil young, and i don't know why this semi-rare pedal hasn't become a holy grail of sorts as opposed to a black sheep. you can't do this with any other overdrive or distortion pedal i've tried. you can come close with the rat, but it's still a bit more over the edge and "obvious" as a pedal than the distortion II.
like most MXR pedals, the volume had better be full crank, and even then at lower gain settings you're likely to lose some level when you stomp on it. i don't find the filter to be all that useful, and while i initially liked the resonance control up, i find it to be a bit too woofy above 9 o'clock now. still, it's handy to have those knobs around.

Reliability : 10
i would guess that the pedal has been around more than fifteen years and she works like a charm. (at least, she stomps on and off without a quibble and all the knobs work real nice.)

Customer Support : No Opinion
wouldn't bother. get yourself a schem and one of them there radio shack saw-do-rin guns.

Overall Rating : 8
this pedal is commonly seen for $40-50, and i think it's a steal. if i could get rid of some of the hum at high gain, or be assured that most DIIs didn't have that problem and it was just the one i already have, i'd buy three or four more, chain 'em up with different settings for all the various distortions i need, and leave everything else at home. don't pass this one up at your local pawn shop.
i almost wish this pedal would suddenly become a collector's item. perhaps then MXR would put out a less noisy "reissue." (or it might suck. who knows.) write your congressman and tell them that an artificial boost on the value and "collectability" of this pedal is needed NOW.


Product: MXR Distortion II
Price Paid: US $50 used
Submitted 03/08/1996 at 10:06pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 9
Very easy to use. 4 knobs, play with them until you get a sound you like. The knobs are for: amount of Distortion, Resonance, which is like a bass rolloff/booster, Filter, which is a high filter, and volume. Sounds like a distortion +, basically, but with more control over sound.

Sound Quality : 9
It sounds like a distortion+. It has the typical noise for an MXR product, ie kind of noisy but bearable. If you like the way a distortion + sounds (I do), you'll love this pedal.

Reliability : 10
It's ancient and still works great. I don't worry about a backup when I use it at gigs. All my other MXR stuff is super-dependable.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I think that MXR innovations is out of business. Someone else makes MXR now, so I don't know, really.

Overall Rating : 9
I would buy it again. I like the simple layout, and I like the filter/resonance controls. One thing I never like about distortion +s was the lack of control over the sound. This makes up for that, and you get the same basic smooth sound. I also dig that it is AC powered. I went through bunches of "vintage" distortion boxes before I got this one, and this is the only one that I have really dug.

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