Morley Bad Horsie Wah
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Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: USD 45
Submitted 12/07/2008
at 12:01am
by Joe Cotten
Email: ballad_fen<at>yahoo dot ie
Ease of Use
:
10
This is the easiest wah I've ever used because of the switchless design. Step on it and it makes a noise similar to the human voice saying the syllable "wah". That's an amazing coincidence, that something called a wah pedal would make that noise. I laughed so hard.
Anyway...yeah, it turns on when you start it moving, turns off when you take off your foot. There's a delay between when you release and when it shuts off; this was about three quarters of a second when I got it, but it's very easy to adjust it. The internal trimpot, according to the website, can take it from 3.5 seconds to almost instant. My only problem with that is that when you release the pedal, the switch to bypass increases the volume and clarity just enough for it sound like a weird little echo, but this isn't always noticeable...I'd say it's a complete nonissue generally, but it keeps this from a 10.
Sound Quality
:
10
I run a Squier Strat with hot rails into this pedal, a Behringer tuner, Danelectro octave, Behringer Big Muff clone, Digitech Hot Head and Digitech Grunge. Depending on the volume I need my amp will be either a Fender G-DEC Junior or a 60's Kustom 200. With no distortion, the wah is almost totally silent. With more than 1 distortion, it gets a sort of gargle when it's down.
Oh, on the tone...where to begin. Well, I got this pedal because the Morley Pro Series Volume/Wah 2 was ridiculously underpowered. You couldn't hear it with even one distortion. I was worried that since it was made by the same people this pedal might be the same. I was an idiot.
The wah is extremely strong. It's squawky. It works well for that screechy Crybaby tone, and it has a nice dark tone when it's not all the way down. It works for Hendrix tones, Kirk Hammett solos, Tom Morello rhythms, and that weird tribal percussive thing that people do that doesn't seem to have a technical name. (Course those three used Crybabys, don't get me wrong, it's not quite the same, but it works.)
It asks if I can get the sound of my favorite artists...my favorite artist is Kurt Cobain and so far as I know he didn't use a wah pedal in his life. But it's close to J Mascis, Billy Corgan, James Iha, and Joe Satriani. I haven't noticed any other effects it works particularly well with when playing normally. But if you have one and get bored, try this:
Turn on an octave pedal and a pretty long delay.
Choke the strings with your left hand. Strum in whatever rhythm you feel like.
Press the wah down slowly. You'll notice a series of different percussion tones.
Reliability
:
10
I've only had this pedal for a few days, and I haven't gigged with it yet, but as I said, I've had a Morley wah before. These things have casings made from cold-rolled steel. They come with rubber pads on the pedal itself to soften it's blows on the main casing. I've opened it up and it has analog circuitry (which I've always found more reliable, plus it's much easier to repair if something breaks) and the board has no apparent stressed areas. The LED/LDR system means it doesn't have a normal potentiometer that can wear out. Basically, I can find no fault in it here.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never talked to 'em.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play a mix of grunge (Nirvana, Mudhoney, Tad), 60's blues rock (The Doors, Jimi Hendrix), old school metal (Tony Iommi's kinda thing) and noisy stuff (like My Bloody Valentine and Sonic Youth). That really doesn't call for a wah most of the time, but when it does I want something loud, sharp and squawky that I can turn on and off fast. This is perfect in that sense. I've been playing about three years now, and this is still the only pedal I own that most people would agree is as awesome as I think it is; seriously, even the metal snobs would get behind this thing. If it were lost I would call up a thousand corpses from the cthonic lands of the dead to tear the world apart searching for it. If it were stolen I would conjure the vilest demons of the abyss to wreak an endless revenge on the thief. Failing that I'd definitely get a new one. The only thing I wish it had is what I wish all wah pedals had: the ability to begin the sweep on a natural tone instead of needing it to start muddy. It doesn't look like that's happening any time soon, so this is the next best thing. I've never played a Bad Horsie II, so I'll assume that the BH2 is slightly better than the BH1 and call this the second best wah ever. Email me if you have a question. Thank you and good night.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 12/20/2007
at 11:11am
by Hubaxe
Email: hubbab<at>free dot fr
Ease of Use
:
10
I bought this to have the famous switchless stuff.
It's a wah, plug, move your foot, works !
Sound Quality
:
7
I come from a cry baby wth a true bypass.
No true bypass there, not really possible due to autoswitch. A bit of treble loss. Need to compensate on the preamp to retrieve my sound.
Wah range is a bit bassy on most of the pedal range and become interesting at the treble end. Full on, the pedal delivers a nice treble sound allowing to get a nice feedback, that's really great to play with.
Not a noisy pedal.
I run that into a Carvin Quadx, only on lead sounds for soloing.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Mine is used, and works
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never contacted them
Overall Rating
:
8
Very usable for me. A Wah is a question of taste. I will not say this one is good or bad, I just like it and adopted it strait away in my rig.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 10/06/2007
at 02:02pm
by Rog
Ease of Use
:
9
Very, very easy to use. You just have to anticipate the switch off delay (which is necessary to stop it going off whan you are playing in the pedal up position. Oh and if one more person says this has true bypass I will explode - it doesn't.
Sound Quality
:
9
I want to start by saying that if you are after a cry baby type of wah then get one. There are a gazillion samples of new, old, clones etc. I have a Teese RMC-3 and that does the cry baby thing very well for me.
This is a different animal altogether. For medium to high gain lead I think its fantastic. The sweep is both wide and smooth (helped by the spring loaded mechanism) but at all times with the foot down you get a completely faithful top end to the sound. Its absolutely glorious for fast runs up and down the neck.
Beyond the 12th fret? Well actually it follows the usual rules of not cutting it with the neck pickup (as with all wahs) and sounding more pronounced with the bridge pickup. You don't get the upper mid quack that you get with cry babys above the 12th fret but you do retain the tone of that top E with the pedal down, better than with a cry baby. And thats the trade off. Until someone makes an intelligent wah that knows where you are playing then transforms you have to accept that everything comes at a price. In this case they got is just right and the reward is that I just love playing through this thing.
Downside? Yes for me a big one - this unit sounds much better on than off - to the point where I dread taking my foot off it. The buffer is harsh and dry sounding and with a guitar like a Jem sounds very unmusical to my ears. I would be amazed if Vai plays (played?) a stock one of these.
Anyway I like it so much that I'm going to install a bypass switch behind the LED!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
No comment but I have taken it apart and its a very intelligent single PCB design that should be trouble free. If you can be a55ed you can even add componen ts to turn it into a BH2 (no way for me).
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
A highly satisfying wah that is a keeper. I just wish it had either true bypass or a less intrusive buffer (like Boss use).
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: USD 99
Submitted 08/01/2007
at 03:32pm
by Adam
Email: Jazzymood24<at>hotmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
9
Real easy ! the only adjustment you have to make is the "Wah delay".
You have to unscrew the 2 screw on each side and then pull off the underplate... and then you'll see a "connection" with the "wah delay" inscription. from the downside "vision" you'll have to screw clockwise with a fine/little screw philips head or flat head... just a little bit not too much. and it will be all set up ! Now my wah have pratically no decay and it's perfect !
Sound Quality
:
9
This wah is simply the best I ever had ! I still have my old cry baby... I keep it for the reverse wah effect in Pink Floyd's "Echoes". Because in other circumstances the cry baby simply kills the tone and reduce the amount of distortion and VOLUME !
Now all my tone nightmares are over... the "Bad Horsie" is killer sounding. Perfect for rock, heavy context... even funk (but any wah can play funk well !).
Another good point is that the pedal is switchless and have an electro optical circuitry... so you'll never have any pots problem anymore and it keeps the circuitry clean too... because you don't have any opening... so dust or anything else CAN'T damage the circuitry.
Now this is the equiment I'm using with it:
Fender Fat Strat USA/Jackson King-V USA=>Boss TU2- Morley Bad Horsie - Boss Noise Supressor - MXR Super Comp - B.K. Butler Tube Driver - Xotic BB Preamp - Xotic AC Booster - Xotic RC Booster - Electro-Harmonix Deluxe Mistress Flanger - MXR Phase 90 EVH - Boss Chorus Ensemble - T-Rex tremster Tremolo - Boss Volume Pedal - Boss Digital Delay DD3 => CARVIN LEGACY HEAD w/4x12" cabinet
Reliability
:
10
This IS my favorite WAH in a long way !!! I totally rely on it !
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
9
I play the guitar since 1995. I'm playing mostly Rock, Heavy, Progressive and Blues music... and this pedal completly suits my style of music and my style of playing ! This is my second Wah pedal since 1998 (I still have my cry baby)... but My main wah is NOW my BAD HORSIE... and by the way you don't have to be a Vai fan to like this wah... you simply have to like rock wah tone and a mix of vintage and new wah type sound.
This is simply the best wah I ever played with... and I have tried a lot !!!
SO HERE'S THE PROS AND CONS:
PROS:
-Switchless, electro optical circuitry
-No tone and volume killer
-Perfect for rock/heavy solos (Dream Theater, Vai, Satch, etc.)
-Versatility
-Price
-Not noisy at all
CONS:
- Have to adjust wah delay
to finish the review I just wanted to say that this wah made me RE like wah solos !!! It surely help me to have a wide range of tone and sound options in my pedalboard !!!
and for the price... you CAN'T have a better wah ! period !
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/26/2007
at 06:39pm
by tim
Ease of Use
:
10
Simple. Plug in and play. Automatically disengages when not in use.
Sound Quality
:
2
Holy crap. This pedal has no "sweep" whatsoever. It basically has two tone settings, low/bassy and high/trebly. When you engage the pedal and have the pedal pushed towards the back, it sounds muddy and gross. Pushed forward, it sounds tinny, thin, and annoying. I get this effect playing through all my guitars (American Strat, Les Paul, others) and all my amps (Fender, Ampeg, and little Squier practice amp). Stick with Crybaby's.
Reliability
:
8
Seems to have pretty good construction, a solid unit, if you can get passed the sound problem.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
n/a
Overall Rating
:
5
I would probably only use this pedal in an emergency.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: Euros 130
Submitted 01/29/2007
at 07:29am
by Arttu the Ace
Email: kesaduuniblues<at>luukku dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
Nothing special here. It's a pedal with no knobs. There is a micrometric off-delay setting inside, but I've never had to touch that. The factory preset (1 sec) is very suitable for me.
Easy to get a good sound? Hell yeah! Step on it!
Sound Quality
:
10
I run my Horsie first in effects chain. My setup is: Yamaha Custom SG / Fender Standard Telecaster -> Bad Horsie -> Okko Diablo overdrive -> Sanox Chorus -> Carl Martin Delay -> Laney TT-20 all-valve combo.
I bought my Bad Horsie over 6 years ago. I've changed most of my setup a few times since, but the wah has always been there. The sound of the wah has grown to be a major part of "my sound", and I wouldn't go on a gig without it.
What comes to the sound - I love it. I agree with Mick Box that when you are playing guitar through a wah, you are playing two instruments at the same time. The sound of this instrument suits extremely well with my (and my band's) music.
Let's talk about the wah. Some players here say that the pedal is very trebly and boosts volume. True. The advantage gained by this is that the wah is very usable with neck pickups, too! Especially the (in-)famous Cry Baby is totally useless with a fat neck humbucker. With Bad Horsie you really can make use of your thick clean lead sound with that Les Paul neck pickup.
I don't use my wah to get that late 70's porn-movie-funk-wah stuff; My Horsie gets stepped on lead parts. A great wah lead sound cuts through FOH mix well no matter how many guitarists and/or hammonds are backing your solo. Distortion or no distortion. It doesn't wail, it sings.
Bad Horsie is no one-trick-pony.
Reliability
:
6
Bad Horsie has seen quite a load of stages and roadies' hands. It wouldn't be on my pedalboard for some time if I hadn't done two major service repairs to it.
First problem came with the optical circuit: The red light LED had turned up in it's welding and it had to be reset to it's initial position. Not a big deal.
Second problem was more severe, and it occurred on the very worst place: on stage. I run the Bad Horsie on DC power supply and the jack just broke down during a lead part of set's second song. I guess the pedal slipped on the floor and streched the DC cord enough to break the power supply jack in the pedal's right hand side. The real problem is that the pedal isn't true bypass, so without power it doesn't pass through the signal. After the gig I searched for a replacement jack and installed it myself. It wasn't really that hard.
Other than those two, no problems have come to Horsie's way so far.
I still gig without a backup.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with the company.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play anything from soul to southern and blues to metal. My band plays mostly blues-oriented modern rock, and Bad Horsie has proven to be a very useful pedal in the band.
I haven't counted, but I'd guess the wah pedal has toured with me nearly 200 shows, countless band trainings, studio sessions and home jams. I guess I'll be playing it 10 years from now, too.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: USD 40
Submitted 01/27/2007
at 11:16pm
by mark
Email: mlmguitar<at>yahoo dot com
Ease of Use
:
5
easy plain and simple to speak.
Sound Quality
:
5
Its way too trebly i have to keep the pedal about halfway for better vocal quality of the wah the rest seems useless to me.
Reliability
:
9
i played quite a few gigs with this pedal to say the least it's built like a tank it can take the abuse but eats up too many batteries which is why i prefer to use dunlop wahs the battery life is good up to 6months or maybe more thats if you upplug it when not in use.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
6
Theres alot of pros and cons about this pedal.
Pro's are 1).the auto return mode so you dont have to click the effect on/off. 2).it's got a wide sweep/more foot travel for more tone variation. 3)you dont have to push down the pedal during switching which avoids the possibility of wear and tear on the mechanical parts of the wah.
Cons are 1).because of the auto return the wah doesnt always shut off smoothly at the end of a guitar solo.2).finding that sweet spot between the low and mid posistion because of it's wider treble range
that takes up a good 1/2 or maybe2/3's of this pedal.3)it's sometimes difficult to end a screaming lead guitar solo without hearing a hollow type of sound caused by the pedal turned off in the bass posistion.
I basically bought this pedal as a backup because my dunlop crybaby gcb-95 was having problems at the time which i end up getting it fixed myself somehow parts get loose every now and then but i still have it.I Wish this pedal was easy to take apart so i can make certain adjustments to make the wah sound better.With the crybaby just take the rubber feet off to open the back and loosen the screws so you can twist the tone pots to take some of the treble off but not too much you wanna hear the wah just enough to make it more rich and full sounding.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: USD 60 USED
Submitted 01/13/2007
at 12:05pm
by SG
Email: telebunker at comcast<dot>net
Ease of Use
:
10
Very easy to use, quiet, sturdy, a real joy
Sound Quality
:
10
sound quality is wonderful, always used Cry Babys in the past but really love this pedal. will never go back.
Reliability
:
10
built like a tank, awesome construction
Customer Support
:
10
this is the main reason I submitted this review. I recently called Morley and they were very kind and helpful. Here is the link to the website: http://www.morleypedals.com/contactus.html.
It has their contact phone numbers as well. The gentleman I spoke is Jim Seguin--he knew the part I needed for my Bad Horsie and is going to mail it out FREE! That's right free. The chrome nut and black plastic piece for the 1/4 inch input jack came loose and I lost it. I can still use the pedal but the jack comes loose sometimes and that can be a real problem. Especially when I'm trying to lay down some hot licks. Just wanted everyone to know.
Overall Rating
:
10
love everything about this pedal
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 11/27/2006
at 12:58pm
by Joe
Ease of Use
:
9
no knobs o anything so just rock your foot back and forth
Sound Quality
:
2
why would a great guitarist like steve Vai use a piece of crap like this? when you put your foot forward it is very noisy like a jumbo jet you cant hear your guitar over the hum and the tone is gone from your guitar as soon as you rock forward it sounds like you are playing underwater it sounds terrible.
Reliability
:
9
no problems yet
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
2
it is sturdy enough but it sounds terrible i am going to sell it and get a dunlop of some sort maybe a zakk wylde one but stay away from this wah unless you want to sound like you a playing at the bottom of a swimming pool with a lot of flies
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: US $50. used
Submitted 05/08/2006
at 01:33pm
by randy
Ease of Use
:
10
JUST STEP ON IT to turn it on spring takes it back up and turns it off when you remove your foot.. simple
Sound Quality
:
8
AS far as a wah it definatley has a distinctive sound, very defined and pronounced wah..wah. however toward the toe down it is very trebly or bitey, I found a comfortable, ear pleasing, spot in the middle of the treddle, however if you venture too far forward then again shrill and bitey. It will out wah a crybaby and there are no pots to get scratchy but if you use a wah as a filter then a crybaby would be a better choice as it will stay where you put it as far as pedal travel. I f you want the best of both worlds why not use a crybaby and a bad horsie side by side ,then one can wah and one can filter
Reliability
:
10
rugged and dependable
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt
Overall Rating
:
9
play contemporary christian and power worship. been playing 34 years
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 03/13/2006
at 08:21am
by Ollie Woodall
Ease of Use
:
8
I'm giving it an eight for ease of use because the ability to adjust the delay time via a trimpot inside the unit is great but hardly user friendly. I think there are a lot of users out there who have picked one of these up second-hand and have no idea that this feature exists.
In terms of use, it's as easy to operate as any wah, although you'll instantly notice that the pedal is sprung and returns to position when you lift your foot off. You can't 'fix' the wah into a favoured position, like the Crybaby and Vox etc
The cool thing about this pedal is that you don't 'switch' it on. The wah effect is activated when you step on it, and it switches itself off once you've taken your foot off. There is a delay between the unit switching off and you removing your foot, which is set by a trim pot inside the unit (adjustable by a flat-head screwdriver).
Sound Quality
:
7
Ok. I've been playing with this pedal all afternoon so that I could compare it to my George Dennis GD30 Wah. The GD30 is based on the Crybaby sound but, like the Morley Bad Horsie, is optical.
So.....after playing these two pedals side by side I can tell you the following.
This Wah is a FANTASTIC wah for metal and hard rock lead playing. Pump up the overdrive/distortion and this Wah truly sings. If you want to know what it sounds like, go dig out the "Reaper Rap" by Steve Vai. The first couple of licks in that song is this pedal personified (I don't know if a Bad Horsie was used on that record, but it definately sounds like one). Overdriven, this is a very aggressive wah, a unison bend with a sweep from this wah is very dramatic and the way the tone 'falls into' the treble part of the wah is great for high-energy leads. Think Zakk Wylde on the solo for 'No More Tears'
However.......on a clean setting.....this pedal really doesn't cut it. The reason being that the sweep, although dramatic, is not a smooth transition from Bass to Treble. The pedal seems to, about a 3rd of the way forward, just literally JUMP to the treble part of the sweep. it is not subtle. If you repeatedly pick a clean note and move the pedal back and forth across it's whole sweep, it's really obvious where the jump in tone is and it's useless for clean funk work, or those wah'd, spacy picked chords that Jimmy Page gets in 'No Quarter' on the 'Song Remains the Same' DVD. If you want to simulate that sound, you have to rock the pedal only within the first two thirds of it's sweep, for fear of hitting the 'treble zone' !!!
That being said, this is a much more 'lively' and 'modern' pedal than a Crybaby or the George Dennis GD30. The extra treble that is has in it's sweep makes soloing very articulate and crisp (with overdrive), whereas the funkier, warmer GD30 did seem 'muffled' in comparison to the Morley.
Tonewise, the Morley seems to take very little tone out of the guitar when on, and I didn't notice any discernible drop or increase in volume when engaging the pedal. Great, great designed pedal, but in the end, not a keeper for me. I prefer the warmer George Dennis GD30, BUT I will miss this pedal, just for it's sheer exuberance for rock soloing. This thing would really cut through the mix at a gig and most likely tear the face off the front row!
Reliability
:
9
It's looks tough. I've never gigged it but I believe Morley pedals to be very durable. With the optical, switchless design, I really can't imagine it crapping out on you at all.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
never dealt with Morley
Overall Rating
:
8
A great pedal. I reccommend it to modern metal/rock players, NOT to more classic rockers who need a clean wah from time to time for funky passages and chords.
For overdriven, lead guitar though, this baby rocks! But I'll take my George Dennis GD30 over it, anyday.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: US $68.00 used
Submitted 11/19/2005
at 05:01pm
by E.T.
Ease of Use
:
10
Oh, come on!! Rock it back and forth to get the killer wah sound...
Sound Quality
:
10
This wah has a great sweep, and I can get a lot of good Steve Vai and Slash tones out of it. No noise whatsoever. Does not suck your tone. I absolutely love this pedal, much better tone than crybaby, crybabies are overated!! Here is my setup: 2002 PRS Tremonti SE- 1991 Squier Standard strat- Digitech RP80 Processor- Danelectro Free Speech Talkbox- Bad Horsie- Randall RG75. I know, it aint the best setup, i will be making changes soon.
Reliability
:
9
This thing is built like a tank, i could probably drop it down a flight of stairs and it would be fine. It was left on my porch for 5 hours after being shipped because I wasn't home, and it works fine anyway! I would definitely gig without a backup, this thing can hold its own.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to contact 'em, but I heard they're pretty good.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play blues, rock and metal, and it matched my style perfectly. The switchless feature on it works like a dream! If it was ever stolen, I would find the guy who did it, and beat them senseless with the pedal! I cmpared it with the crybaby classic, and i chose the bad horsie because it was switchless and it just sounded better overall. Hey, if Steve Vai uses it, i suggest u get out there and get it, he is one of the best players out there. So go to guitar center (or ebay) and get a bad horsie!!
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: 150 (EUR)
Submitted 10/02/2005
at 06:13am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
9
Very easy to use, just plug it in, step on it and that's it. The only problem here is that you have to open it to adjust the off-delay time, but you won't do that regularly, so it's just a one-time issue. I suggest setting the off-delay to zero, than you can pull off some nice tricks on it which aren't possible with mechanically switched wahs, like playing a lick and just only wah-ing some notes in the middle of it, or wah-ing every second note, or...
Sound Quality
:
6
The wah sound is very neutral, doesn't have so much "character" as e.g. a Crybaby, but that's not necessarily bad, especially when played with lots of distortion, but the clean sound is nice, too. However, there is a big problem when playing clean: the pedal produces an immense volume boost when turned on, so when you set your clean sound at a sensible volume, it will blast your ears when you turn the wah on. This makes it almost impossible to use the pedal clean, the only way out is to turn down your volume pedal (if you have one... now, everyone sould have one!) before wah-ing and turn it up afterwards, but that makes switching to and from wah even slower than mechanical switching on a Crybaby-style pedal. They should have included a trim pot for adjusting the wah level. Thus, it can't get a rating higher than 6 in this category.
Reliability
:
10
Seems to be very reliable, has never failed and I have it for years.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never dealt with them.
Overall Rating
:
7
I play Rock (pretty much everything that fits in this large category), Funk and Jazz. I play clean most of the time, and thus the pedal's volume boost is a big problem for me. If you play mostly with distortion, it should be no problem for you. That aside, it's a nice pedal, but HUGE, probably the biggest wah-only pedal on the planet, and eats a lot of pedalboard space. If you look inside it, it's clearly unnecessary for it to be so big, they could have made it smaller.
Conclusion: if you don't care about the volume boost and have lot's of space on your pedalboard, get it, because the step-on function is just brilliant. Otherwise, better look further.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 08/19/2005
at 07:02am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
this is a follow up on my past review
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
The actual effect and operation is ok. I recently a/b ed this thing and it totally sucks your guitar tone big time on or bypassed. After this realization, i have remove it from my pedal board permanantly. I would adise anyone that cares about tone loss through effects to stay away from this buzz kill. I am now looking at a RMC or Fulltone Wah which both are true bypass and sound wonderful. You get what you pay for folks.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: US $84 used
Submitted 06/30/2005
at 08:12am
by steven lukman
Ease of Use
:
10
its very easy to use, just step on it and you will get steve vai sound
Sound Quality
:
9
fender stratocaster usa> Ibanez S series> Ashdown peacemaker 60 head amp> boss ds1 Arammat mod.
its not noisy, i use my ds 1 and step it on my bad horsie, it sound perfect, but when i play the wah, and i let go my foot, it has a delay time, but i think its ok, only half a second.
Reliability
:
9
i can depend on this pedal for my gig, i dont think its easy to break, you can see all protected by metal, its pretty heavy compared to dunlop.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
10
recommended A+
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: US $130
Submitted 02/21/2005
at 12:06am
by Cesar Huesca
Ease of Use
:
9
Well folks, I'm here again now posting my impression of the Bad Horsie.
EASY and comfortable to use, the pedal feels tight and firm, just adjust the "delay off" to your liking, anyway you don't have to worry about not getting the very lower frequencies fearing that you can go to bypass accidentally, the lower frequency have something like 1cm free of sweep after bypass position, anyway adjust the "delay off" as you wish.
Sound Quality
:
9
The wah effect is really cool, the sweep is smooth and accurate!!! It sounds exactlly as Steve Vai does, little bit noisy at high gain settings, not a problem for me in a live situation bearing in mind that all wahs do the same thing at high gain settings ayway I use noise gate to keep things quiet while I'm not playing.
I don't notice any coloration or tone sucking at bypass mode and most important THIS IS A TRUE WAH WAH SOUND.
For a complete display of my live rig setup see below...
Reliability
:
9
Really solid, rugged and well built.
Customer Support
:
9
Bill Wenzloff is a really cool guy who will help you with any issue you could have.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play lots of types of music but rock is my main stuff, I've been playing since almost 12 years ago, and definetely this is a great option for a wah pedal out there, as I said in my past review, somebody will prefer to keep their Dunlops or Vox(I've owned both), but I suggest you to try something different, the Bad Horsie does things really fine and I decided to replace my Crybaby because of the features, not having pots and switches is really cool and that doesn't mean you won't get a true wah effect, for me this is a traditional, well done wah sound achieved by a modern design so try it!!! Remember THIS IS A REAL WAH SOUND so do not hesitate about getting one.
Here is my live rig setup for those intrested:
guitars: Fender American Stratocaster, Ibanez RG2020XTLB, Ibanez JEM7VSBL.
amp: Marshall JCM900 4502.
pedals:(FURMAN SPB-8 pedalboard) MXR Wylde Overdrive, Morley Bad Horsie, Digitech Whammy Reissue, Boss FV-50H volume pedal with a Boss TU-12 tuner.
rack: Shure Wireless reciever, Rack Rider power conditioner/light module, TC Electronic G-Major multi FX proccesor.
That's it guys, happy WHAING to everybody!!!
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 02/19/2005
at 02:05pm
by Cesar Huesca
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
WELL I HOPE THIS CAN HELP YOU GUYS OUT THERE, I'M ABOUT TO GET A BAD HORSIE IN TWO DAYS, I HAVEN'T TRIED IT YET BUT I CAN ASSUME THE NEXT:
FOR ALL THOSE OF YOU THRASHMETAL-MIDSCOOPED TONE GUITAR FREAKS THIS MIGHT NOT BE THE WAH PEDAL FOR YOU DEFINITELY, I AGREE THAT THE BAD HORSIE DOESN'T HAVE THE EFFECT RANGE OF THE CRYBABYS, JUST BY HEARING AT BOTH PEDALS, BUT BEFORE TAKE YOUR LAST WORD, PLEASE TAKE YOUR TIME TO TWEAK YOUR AMP IN DIFFERENT WAYS 'TIL YOU GET A GOOD BAD HORSIE PERFORMANCE, MR. VAI DOESN'T USE ANY SCOOPED TONE AT ALL, HE ACTUALLY USES LOTS OF MIDRANGE ON HIS LEGACY'S, I GUESS STEVE VAI AND MORLEY DIDN'T DESIGN THIS PEDAL WITH THE DIMEBAG DARREL TONE IN MIND... DIME LEFT A GREAT SIGNATURE WAH PEDAL TO CHOOSE FOR THAT.
ON THE OTHER HAND I CAN SEE A LOT OF REVIEWS POINTING THAT THE BAD HORSIE PERFORMS A LOT BETTER THAN THE OLDIE WAHS(DUNLOPS/VOX), SOMEBODY DECIDE TO STAY CLOSE THE OLDIES SO THERE'S A LOT OF DIVERSITY AT OPINIONS, SOME INTELLIGENT SOME NOT, QUITE INTRESTING IN FACT.
I'M POINTING MY FINGER DIRECTLY TO THOSE METAL GUYS, WHY??? WELL, CHECK REVIEWS ABOUT THIS PEDAL, AND A GREAT NUMBER OF NEGATIVE REVIEWS SAY IN THE "OVERALL RATING" SECTION: I PLAY METAL, I LIKE METAL, I PLAY METAL AND SO ON...
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
SO GUYS SLOW DOWN, TWEAK YOUR TONE, EXPERIMENT AND DON'T BE THAT NARROW MINDED, MAYBE THE PEDAL IS NOT THE PROBLEM BUT YOUR EQUALIZATIONS. I CAN TAKE FOR SURE THAT I WON'T HAVE ANY COMPLAINT ABOUT THE BAD HORSIE.
I LOVE DUNLOPS AS WELL, THEY COULD BE IMPERFECT, WEARING PARTS, OLD DESIGN, SUCK TONE... BUT THE W A H EFFECT IS GREAT...
I'LL BE BACK FOR MY COMPLETE REVIEW, AND I HOPE THIS OFFERS SOME HELP TO EVERYBODY.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: US $60 used
Submitted 01/05/2005
at 04:02pm
by Tony
Email: ireLocus<at>gmail dot com
Ease of Use
:
10
You put your foot on it, it's on. You take your foot off it, it's off. Now you know all there is to know.
Sound Quality
:
10
It's the only wah I use, and I've gone through a Vox, a Cry baby, a Singing Geisha and a Snarling Dogs (which was total crap, SD's should just roll over and die.)
Now I use a Peavey Wolfgang > Little Alligator volume > Bad Horsie wah > MXR Super Comp > Big Muff Pi (USA) > MXR 10 band EQ > Small Clone chorus > Line 6 Echo Park delay > another Little Alligator > one of two Marshall amps. I power it all with a Voodoo Lab Pedal Power 2 for absolutely no background noise and I'm set.
Reliability
:
10
Never had an issue in 4 years, and I bought it from a guy who had had it for a couple years himself (he was upgrading to a Bad Horsie II, mind you)
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Never had to call 'em. I bet they get bored, working for the manufacturer of the most idiot proof pedals out there.
Overall Rating
:
10
Kick ass pedal.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 11/22/2004
at 07:39am
by Garrett Capel
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Most User Friendly Wah ever made.
Sound Quality
:
9
Mesa DC-5 head SG-1 and a few other pedals. I love the tone of this jewel. I like the limited sweep range because of the way I use the effect. It all depends on how you use it. Mechanically the pedal is fast because of its spring return to the bypass postion. This may be the reason for the limited sweep range. I tend to use the higher range, and to me it;s plenty high enough unlike the crybaby type wah's which get dog howling high freq. Now I have two small complaints. I have set the trim pot inside all the way off and there is still a little delay for the effect to turn on unlike the crybaby type where it turns on immediatly with the pushbutton switch. The other complaint goes along with the other in that wah is not true bypass and I get a small amount of tone kill in bypass. These complaints don't keep me from using it. It's well worth the functionality of effect that this one of akind wah has.
Reliability
:
No Opinion
not problems it is metal cased.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: 125 (CDN)
Submitted 09/21/2004
at 04:25pm
by sage
Email: sage at randomblind<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
Super easy to use, just plug it in and go wild.
Sound Quality
:
9
Setup: Goth Explorer -> MXR Dynacomp -> Whammy II -> Bad Horsie -> Marshall DSL100 -> (effects loop send) Sovtek Big Muff Pi -> Morley Pro Flanger -> Danelectro Dan-Echo (effects loop return) -> Marshall 1960A 4x12 Cabinet.
I've adjusted the sweep to expand the range and adjusted the trim pot for the effect activation to its minimum. The pedal sounds awesome. Some other reviews mention that it's not suited to clean passages, but I use it all the time and love the tone. Maybe it's just the way I have it set up, but this pedal totally screams and goes absolutely apeshit when I want it to and also makes nice vocal sounds when I play it clean. Matches up really well with delay. Has a very slight hiss when in use.
Reliability
:
8
I've had the pedal for 7 years and it's still going strong. The spring broke a while back and was easy to replace and something went wrong with it about 2 years into it where the effect would never shut off. See below.
Customer Support
:
10
Took the pedal back where I bought it (West Coast Guitars, Vancouver) long after the warranty had expired and asked them to take care of getting the thing repaired and I'd cover the costs involved. Two weeks later, I got a phone call and went to pick up my pedal and pay for the repair and Morley had not only fixed the pedal for free, but covered shipping both ways. So I bought a Morley channel switch right then and there, just to thank them. Damn thing works better than the supplied Marshall switch, anyway.
Overall Rating
:
10
I play in a band called RANDOMBLIND (http://www.randomblind.com), it's heavy alternative rock, and this pedal is an integral part of my rig. I'll never own another wah, Morley won themselves a lifetime customer with this pedal's killer tone and their wicked service. I love the switchless activation, the durability of the thing, and the way it makes me sound like a better guitarist than I actually am. Previously, I owned a Crybaby and a DOD FX-17 wah and hated them both for different reasons: the Crybaby was scratchy and the DOD sounded like a DOD pedal. The Bad Horsie is a deadly pedal backed up by a top notch company. I'd own more Morley effects if they extended their product line. Bring back the Pro Phaser!!
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 08/11/2004
at 05:16am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
No Opinion
Sound Quality
:
No Opinion
Yes, I like to subscribe 1 thing about these pedals. I went to a local guitarstore and like all others I wanted to buy a morley bad horsie wah. I knew the one a friend of mine has is a very good sounding wah! So I checked the B.H. 1 and 2 and there REALLY was a big difference between these 2. The B.H. 2 had a much wider sweep.
I was like: "How can that happen? There must be something wrong with the B.H. 1!"
So I talked to the personal and told about the B.H. 1 and i asked to switch it with another one. And surprisingly that other B.H. 1 sounded much BETTER!
Reliability
:
No Opinion
Everybody says that this thing is built solid, well that is true.
But for the ones who don't get a good sound out of the wah, could have (how shall iI put it) a BAD badhorsie wah.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
No Opinion
To everybody who wants to buy a morley wah check 2 of the same wahs in case there's a bad one. Today it seems morley is overproducing these wahs. it seems they can't keep up with the quality they are supposes to built!
I came out of the store without the bad horsie wah. instead I bought Planet Waves cables who has lifetime warranty.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: US $59 used
Submitted 08/03/2004
at 10:46am
by Anonymous
Ease of Use
:
10
VERY Simple to use. Step on to use step off to bypass.
NO buttons or switches just the wah rocker arm.
Sound Quality
:
9
My Signal chain:
ESPLTD MH-301 into Morley Bad Horsie Wah into Whirlwind A/B Selector Box(amp Switcher) into HighGain input on 5150HS with a BOSS DD-3 Delay in the amp Effects Loop. Only noise with this rig is the amp hiss wich is normal for the 5150. THE MORLEY WAH IS DEAD SILENT!!!
I use the wah for recording too so this is very important, when your foot isnt on the wah and it bypasses itself it is dead silent. This Wah is F*cking Awsome for me! it has the greatest wah sound ive ever heard. nails modern type wah tone perfectly. I got the idea of getting this wah with the whirlwind selector from gurrg and I can get his tone easily. THANKS MUDVAYNE! I noticed other peoples reviews state the sweep range is not that wide and i somewhat agree with this but it works great in this configuration and if for some reason you need a wider sweep all you have to do is contact Morley and they will happily help you mod it!!! This wah sounds even better with a little delay from the boss petal i use and when they are both on i get crazy with my shit.
Reliability
:
10
100% Reliable. Solid Metal! I feel no backup is necessary.
Customer Support
:
9
From what ive read Morley Company is top notch. A+
they even help you if youve purchased it 2nd hand!!!
which is what i did off ebay for only $59.
Overall Rating
:
10
For Modern Music and Wah Tone this thing is your wah. For Silent Switching and Silent Bypass this is your wah. For super ease of use and reliability this is Definitly your wah. GET THIS WAH!
this thing is certainly a the real deal when it comes to wah tone shaping, It inspires and modivates me to create music!
i would buy it again if it were stolen!
Thanks Morley for this kik ass wah!!!
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: US $99
Submitted 07/23/2004
at 01:30pm
by Jey Gifford
Email: jey at theseakers<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
As I said before.... My drummer could figure this one out.
Have you ever stepped on a regular wah to break into a FABULOUS solo, only to realize you didn't STOMP hard enough and the wah didn't turn on? Well, those days are GONE! Just put your foot on this baby, and rock away. When you're done, just take your foot off and the pedal automatically switches off. The delay time for the OFF feature is easily adjustable.
Sound Quality
:
10
My rig:
GUITARS: American Standard Strat, Mexican Strat, Les Paul Double Cut, Aria Cheep-o
EFFECTS: TS-9, Boss GT-6, DanElectro mistakes... i mean pedals. :)
AMPS: Fender HotRod DeVille 4x10, Vox Valvetronix 2x12
In my first review of this pedal (a little over 2 years ago), I had complained about the noticable increase in volume when I activated the pedal. Bill Wenzloff from Morley contacted me and offered to have the pedal fixed. I had intended to send it to Morley, but have grown used to the unique little quirk in my pedal.
Since my first review, I have owned (and sadly sold) another Bad Horsie wah, and that one DID NOT exhibit the volume increase that my original has.
*SORRY ABOUT NOT SENDING THE PEDAL IN BILL. I JUST CAN'T BE RID OF IT FOR MORE THAN A DAY OR SO!!!!* :)
The sound quality on this pedal is excellent. It has a nice full sweep and gets a GREAT rock wah sound. I've never really liked Cry Babies or the like because they always sound so thin, but the Bad Horsie sounds great. I've even used it extensively on funk tunes.
The other thing that I REALLY dig about this pedal is that it switches on in the BACK position. Normally on a wah pedal, you click it on by stepping FORWARD and then, all of a sudden, your highs are WAY over the top. With the Bad Horsie activating in the BACK position, it opens up some really neat opportunies for swells.
This is by far the coolest sounding Wah pedal out there.
Bill Wenzloff, if y'all need another endorser, you just give me a call, ok?
Reliability
:
10
I've never had an issue with this pedal, and it's had the snot beat out of it. It's been to Russia with me 3 times and has even survived the creeps at Delta airlines (though they DID manage to destroy some of my other pedals including my TS-9).
Customer Support
:
10
I've only ever had to deal with Morley the one time (when I complained about my pedal on this very board) and Bill was very accommodating and helpful. Offered to adjust my pedal for free and ship it back. So, thumbs up guys.
Overall Rating
:
10
Overall, I have been extremely pleased with this pedal. I have owned other pedals and was just frustrated with their sounds. But this one is great. The only thing I struggle with is whether I want to run it before my effects, or after. It sounds really good both ways -- which, if you've read my entire review, is why I had bought another one.... They just wouldn't BOTH fit in my pedal case. :(
I play rock / funk music. Think James Brown meets the Beatles and SRV, and you'll be close and I've been playing for almost 20 years.
I would be at Guitar Center the very same day buying a new one of these (or maybe the BH2) if it got stolen. Let's face it, there aren't many pedals out there that could even get CLOSE to how cool this pedal is, ESPECIALLY since it goes for $100 bucks!!!
God Bless Everyone!
JEY
www.TheSeakers.com
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: US $42 used
Submitted 07/05/2004
at 07:42am
by Dave
Email: Neohacker666 at aol<dot>com
Ease of Use
:
10
I give it a 10, but to actually get it to sound good you have to do some internal manipulation. Buyer beware, it won't sound like a traditional wah unless you open it up.
Sound Quality
:
10
This has gone through both of my rigs. The first one being a Fender strat with a Jb Junior at the bridge, the Bad Horsie, and then a Boss Sd-1 into a Flextone III XL. The other rig is a Bad Horise followed by a sansamp Tri-a.c. into a Vox Pathfinder practice amp or Roland K-60 keyboard amp. I bought it used and the original owner had used white lithium grease to prevent the string from rusting or squeaking, unfortunately in his application he applied far to much and it got onto the shudder. I used some kleenex and wiped it off though, took about 5 minutes. after I did that the pedal had a huge high end sweep. Unfortunately I was after more of a Vox/Crybaby wah tone, this thing seemed like it started it's sweep were the Vox would be at about half way. I could see how this modern type of sweep could be useable in some music, but it wasn't my cup of tea.
I got in touch with Morley and they sent me a little document in .pdf format that told me basically how to mod the thing to get it to do what I want. It took me like 2 or 3 minutes to accomplish and I didn't have to buy any different parts, all you need is a screwdriver and a small wrench.
Now it sounds like a good Crybaby or Vox wah, with none of the hastle of replacement parts.
The Pedal seems to have very little noise. Well worth the 42 dollars I paid.
I'll give it a ten because I'm pretty confident that you can get the sound you want with this thing.
Reliability
:
9
I'd gig without a backup, the thing is built very well. I do depend on it for a couple of gigs a week right now, and it hasn't failed me. I play alot with this wah, almost 40% of the sets we play involve this pedal.
I imagine that there are some design issues, when I opened mine if found that the shudder was not a high quality material, it could easily bend after awhile but for the most part it's pretty well built.
Customer Support
:
10
Morley is a great company. They will tell you how to make the gear you have from them sound great if you simply ask. For those of you below who have belittled the sound quality drop them a line.
Morley even offered to send me a return authorization on a used pedal so that they could fix the tone if I wanted them too.
Even when I had my chinsey Morley Classic wah they told me how to mod it. I ditched that thing along ago because it was to noisy, but the Vai Bad Horsie is not noisy at all.
Overall Rating
:
9
I play a little bit of everything with this pedal. I found that after I fixed it the pedal accels at fusion, modern and vintage rock tones, and even clean stuff. I've been playing professionally for 2 years now and own a whole heap of vintage wahs to compliment this.
I've found myself embracing the Digital revolution in recent years. Granted my flextone doesn't have the exact feel of a tube amp, but I have to say, alot of players use that as a crutch.
My only gripe with this pedal is that the off-delay is really tricky to set. It's a minor concern if you take the time to set it right and don't tinker with it any longer. This wah pedal will not work as a filter either, so for that i would suggest picking up that crybaby wah stompbox or having a second wah pedal on stage. I guess it would be nice to have true bypass.
I use 2 wah's now, one on the left side of the stage and one on the right. I'm using a Bad Horsie, and the Flextone Shortboard[vox sound] wah. I'd have to say that the Bad Horsie replaced my old Crybaby wah that was modded for me.
If you see one of these for as cheap as what I paid, pick it up, it's worth it. I got really lucky with the used one I found at my local sam ash store.
Product: Morley Bad Horsie Wah
Price Paid: N/A used
Submitted 05/29/2004
at 09:02pm
by Travis
Email: none
Ease of Use
:
10
very easy to use it only has one switch and no nther Q-controls or any thing.
Sound Quality
:
7
used with a line 6 spider 2 amp with the noise gate on it gets fairly good tone but it has a limited range. with a distortion pedal in front of it the notes are supressed quite a bit but with a distortion after it it's pretty good.
Reliability
:
9
Its a pretty rugged pedal. and withstands my foot consistantly beating on it pretty darn good.
Customer Support
:
No Opinion
Overall Rating
:
6
It's pretty good, but it really has a low range. For someone that has trouble with other pedals with more than one switch id say its pretty good. For me, I am looking for somthing a little more versitile.
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