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Visual Sound Route 66

Summary
Price New Visual Sound Route 66 @ Musician's Friend
Manufacturer URL http://www.visualsound.net/
Ease of Use 9.1 (99 responses)
Sound Quality 8.9 (101 responses)
Reliability 9.1 (78 responses)
Customer Support 9.4 (43 responses)
Overall Rating 9.2 (93 responses)
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Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 06/10/2009 at 08:28pm by elixxrx66
Email: sf74ca<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : No Opinion

Sound Quality : No Opinion

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : 10
This is an update on a post I already made about this great sounding pedal. I don't normally do this but I felt the need to say something about Visual Sound's customer service. It is truly amazing. I had a problem with the overdrive side of my pedal cutting out and at first I thought it was because on my bass boost switch. I emailed them about it and I got a prompt reply. Dana Weaver was very nice and she offered to send me another one right away. Less than a week later I got it and installed it and it turned out that wasn't the problem. I emailed her again and again she was very nice and helpful. I finally figured out that it was the footswitch and again I emailed Dana to tell her and she said she would send me a new one. Not only that I happened to mention that I also owned a Visual Sound Angry Fuzz and I was wondering if they happened to have t-shirts. Guess what? She totally sent me a free t-shirt as well. Customer service like that ensures I will keep buying Visual Sound products for a long time.

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: USD 70 USED
Submitted 05/12/2009 at 05:09pm by Pete

Ease of Use : 10
This pedal is very easy to use. I like the bass boost switch on the overdrive side which lets me taylor the effect for either the bridge pickup (with the boost on) or the neck pickup (with the boost off). The compressor is also easy to use, and both sides work great together.

Sound Quality : 10
I have used the 1st and 2nd versions of this pedal (not the V2) and I like both of them a lot, though the second version is a little better - has a bit more "gain" on the volume potentiometer. I can get very good "Clapton bluesbreaker" type sounds with the bass boost on using the bridge pickup (humbucking pickup), and nice fat bluesy sounds with the bass boost off using the neck pickup. It is a great pedal (the 2nd version gets a 10 and the first version maybe a 9).

Reliability : 10
No problems with reliability, though I haven't subjected it to abuse, so this is hypothetical to some extent.

Customer Support : 10
Great customer service! They got me some parts (a battery cover and some rubber feet) which had been missing when I bought the pedal (used), and were very pleasant people to talk to. They seemed to appreciate getting customer feedback about their products (including some critical comments). All in all, great customer service.

Overall Rating : 10
I just like this pedal a lot - the combination of compressor and overdrive is very useful to have, and I can get the sounds I am looking for (mostly moderately overdriven sounds - blues, etc., with a bit of compression). I would definitely get another pedal 9the same kind) if mine were lost or stolen.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: USD 139.00
Submitted 06/12/2008 at 07:18am by thomasm972

Ease of Use : 10
I have the V2 version which is the latest. This latest version includes all the upgrades that Keley would perform which lowered the noise level quite a bit compared to the one I had before. Very easy to use. It was a plug and play to get great sound. The manual shows you where to dial it in for certain styles. It nails the TS-8 sound and then some. The tone is incredible and it is very quite. Loves single coils.

Sound Quality : 10
Use a Fender Deluxe Tube Amp and many variations of a Strat. The new version is very quite. What is most striking to me is how much less hiss the compressor side has. They really did a great job at making that the best compressor I have. If you want SRV it is there all day. I can pull some Hendrix out with no problem. With the Fender Amp, forget about trying to nail Metal.

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank. It is supposed to be built for 20,000 stomps or more.

Customer Support : 10
I did purchase another pedal from them off of ebay. They sell some of their refurbished pedals there. Great to deal with. Very friendly.

Overall Rating : 10
I play blues, rock (Hendrix to STP)and anything that catches my ear. This pedal is perfect for early rock and all blues. If you are looking at a TS-808 pedal (everyone seems to have the chip now), this is the best. I have several other brands and this newest version of Route 66 is so much better. I am selling the others as a matter of fact and this will become by main pedal. The compressor is outstanding. It is true bypass. I also just use the compressor with other pedals and it is outstanding as a stand alone. If you want a simple rig, this all in one is so great in front of a tube amp.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: AUS 300
Submitted 05/23/2008 at 11:10am by otismcfly

Ease of Use : 8
Fairly easy to use. works the same as most overdrive/distortion pedals. needs a fair amount tweaking going between humbuckers and single coils though (fair enough really)

Sound Quality : 8
really good. i used the distortion side for a nice blues crunch sound, and kicked in the compressor for a bigger, sustaining lead tone. sounds mint.

Reliability : 3
in a word, terrible. ive had this pedal for about 2 years and i have had everything go wrong with it that possibly could, and all just after the warranty ran out. the LED lights flickered on and off, the overdrive side cut in and out, when the pedal was moved or knocked slightly whilst on it would emit a brain alteringly loud screech. after paying a fortune to get this repaired, the compression side now seems to lose about half its signal when i kick it in.
going on what the other reviews say, i must have just got the dud one made on friday at 4.45, but its still irritating, especially when you're a music student and cant pay for pedal repairs!!

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8
Fantastic sound, unfortunatly its inability to stay functional has left me somewhat suicidal.
go for the route 66 Version 2. apparently, they have the same sound but with most of the design kinks fixed up!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: USD 120
Submitted 01/15/2008 at 07:46pm by elixxrx66
Email: sf74ca at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 8
I found that I got very usable sounds out of this right out of the box and just after plugging it in. I got very good sounds out of this pedal after just a bit of twiddling the knobs. Unlike other compressor pedals I've had I was able to get the tone I was looking for almost immediately . The manual also gives you some examples to get you started.

Sound Quality : 9
The Route 66 says it's two pedals in one but actually it's 3 pedals in one. The compressor, the overdrive and also a clean boost. I'll start with the compressor. It is very transparent and does not color your tone unlike the MXR Dynacomp. Which I found to be more of an overdrive than a compressor. Pete Townshend once used one for that very purpose. I also found it to be a lot easier to use and get a good sound out of it unlike the Boss CS-3. There is some hiss the more you have the sustain knob turned up but the sustain is great. The clean boost is very transparent. Not quite as warm as my MXR Micro Amp but still very usable. The overdrive is Tubescreamer all the way. I have a TS-9 which I modded to TS-808 specs and when I A/B'd them side by side they sound almost exactly alike. In my opinion the Ibanez Tubescreamer is exactly what an overdrive pedal should sound like. It is the yardstick to which all other overdrive pedals are measured by. The Route 66 has done a great job of nailing that tone and with the added compressor it gives you one thing the Tubescreamer somewhat lacks and that's sustain. The bass boost is a nice feature to give more of a full sound but I found the tone switch to be completely unusable and it muddied up my tone.

Reliability : 10
This pedal has a very smart design and seems very solidly built. I wouldn't worry about gigging without a backup. Does anyone actually go around with 2 of every pedal when they gig?

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't had to deal with them so I couldn't say.

Overall Rating : 10
I'm very happy with this pedal. It's cleared up quite a bit of space on my pedal board. I no longer use my MXR Dynacomp, my TS-9 Tubescreamer and my MXR Micro Amp. The 3 pedals I have always used are a clean boost, a compressor and an overdrive. This pedal does all 3 and does them very well. I find this pedal to be very inspiring and if something ever happened to it I'd replace it in a second.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/27/2007 at 05:26pm by P-didly

Ease of Use : 10
New model with two tone switches.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm not trying to get anyone else's sound, I have my own. This delivers clean distortion and compressor is very powerful. I rarely use them together, becuase it is overpowering. I use Am Deluxe strat, Les Paul, GS, and a hybrid semi-hollow body. All sound good, but the SG really stands out with compressor engaged. I use the tone boost on both sides for the strat. The compressor adds a lot of bottom end on my Fender tube amps, Champ and Princeton while still keeping it clean. Sounds very much like an 808 as advertised, perhaps better when you add the compressor.

Reliability : No Opinion
I have heard of this comapny before so I have no idea.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I hope I never have to deal with them, but I have no idea.

Overall Rating : 10
Great pedal, two pedals in one, plus tone (bass) boost for low power amps. Works great with Champ, Princeton, Deluxe, even my Mesa 30 watter. It sounded good through a tranny amp when I bought it, much better at home with tube amps. Not for metal. not enough gain for that. Sweet singing sustain can really make a good guitar sound even better. Sould improve your sound using any amp, i tested with a 30 watt SS Crate amp, and Mexican Tele, so I figured it would sound much better with my equipment and it does diliver, but try it first.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: USD 120
Submitted 06/21/2007 at 05:42am by marcusio

Ease of Use : 9
It is simple to use. It's basically two effects in one. Half of the pedal is an overdirve with three knobs (Drive, Tone, Vol) the other half is a compressor with three knobs (Sutain, Tone, Gain).
There is a boost switch for the OD to give it some more low end. And there is also a tone switch on the compressor section to give it some more highs.It's easy to get a wide range of sounds out of it.

Sound Quality : 10
It is advertized to sound like a TS808; i can say that this is almost true, 'cause i've played a TS808. The overdrive is very smooth, and very clear. The definition of each note is very clear even on heavier settings. I can get good blues sounds out of it.
The compressor was exactly what I was looking for, very versatile giving a great range of tonal possibilites. From a tight squashed signal, to sustain that last for days. Being able to turn each effect on and off independently of one another is a great option.
My setup:
american standard fender strat > Crybaby Wha Wha> Route66 > Danelectro Cool cat > Behringer Preamp Boost> Electro Harmonix Holy Grail> Boss DD3 delay> Fender Hot Rod Deville 212.

Reliability : 10
It's made out of steel so it's durable, and I'm not worried about it dying on me.

Customer Support : 10
they are very kind; you can get a very quick reply by e-mail.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for 18 years, I play blues,classic rock, and jam music. (Hendrix, SRV, Dire Straits, Led Zeppelin, Creedence Clearwater Revival, etc..) This overdrive is what i was looking for, nice thick and smooth, just the right ammount. And the compression is amazing. I've played several other pedals both compression and OD, and other combinations. This pedal blows them all away. The T-Rex Alberta maybe is the only other pedal that is better.This is the best pedal for the money, it combines two effects, and does a great job of keeping them independent of each other, and at the same time offers great possibilities when they're combined.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: USD 109 USED
Submitted 03/09/2007 at 03:06pm by Davor
Email: davor<dot>pavuna at urbanet<dot>ch

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy. The compressor is great and TS is just fabulous in this NEW Rt66 pedal - well done Bob !

Sound Quality : 10
It is 9.5 actually but Ok I give it 10.

I still have my old Rt66 that was noisy and muddy in the TS scetion and this is a major improvement.

My Barber TonePress or Keeley moded MXR are probably better compressors and my Keeley BD-2 phat is probably better than Rt66 TS but overall this pedal is hard to beat and I like it a lot - a keeper.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I play since 1960 and have all the very best gear in the world.

I wrote to Bob that Rt66 Mk I is not good enough and they delivered this Mk II model. It sounds great.

So I wrote to Bob again and asked for the Mk III model that will cost $250 but will have perfect compressor and perfect TS in one box :-)

Still, if you gig a lot then this is a must purchase.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: Euros 128
Submitted 02/14/2007 at 03:52pm by Leslie

Ease of Use : 10
Its very simple to use, push the button, turn a few knobs and go!

Sound Quality : 10
The sound of the compressor is absolutely heavenly, I've never heard a better clean sound than this compressor added with the tone control
"on". Ik play on a strat deluxe (ash) and a fender bassman 59 reissue.

It enhances the sound really bringing it to another level.
I play on 2 effect setups:

the first is a combination of the visual sound H2O (chorus and echo/delay), a jeckyll and hyde (high gain distortion and overdrive) and the route 66, finished with a volumepedal and a RMC wah.
All together in one flightcase ready to get almost every sound I need. I play rock, blues, pop and so on...

I recently wanted to get a sep higher and bought a G-systen (TC electronics) als a very nice peace of effects!!! But after programming several sound I kicked the Route 66 in the effects loop replacing the TC electronics compressor to maintain that unique sound I only managed to get by using the Route 66...

The overdrive section is also super... This pedal has it all...
Very nice work!

Reliability : 10
It's build very rugged, never had any problems...

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never needed them...

Overall Rating : 10
My advice is , if your looking for that one killer sound that not shapes but supports your guitarsound, don't hesitate get this Route 66 pedal.
(I should send a fee tot visual sound for promoting their products, haha.. but its really that good.)

A combination of the H2O, The jeckyll and hyde and route 66 is like having a threesome .. perfect sound.

Off course, you should also look a t the rest of your gear, it has to be ok to.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: euro 300.00
Submitted 12/26/2006 at 07:44am by some idiot

Ease of Use : 8
easy to use overdrive, the comp is rather noisy though.

Sound Quality : 10
I use strats and early metal panel Marshall amps.
I have used all types of drives in the past and used to also own a J&H.
I like the Route-66 much more and it seems to have more gain on the TS side which I didnt know.
Pedals that have been on my board in the past are as follows, OD-3, OD-1, DS-1, SD-1, Voodoo Labs Sparkle Drive, GT-3, Mi Audio Crunch Box [still on the board] H.B.E Germania, Juice Box, OCD

I just picked mine up this evening after being blown away with the creamy amp and pedal combination, lots of gain on tap and really seems to make a good tube amp work hard. think Eric Johnson tone.
I dont use the compressor side, its very noisy when used in conjunction with the TS side plus I have no need for a comp.

I didnt think I would ever come across another drive pedal that would beat or equal the Crunch Box but this one equals it and gives me a creamier tone by a tad.
If youre a toneful player you will most likely enjoy this pedal.
the buffer seems to sound good and makes all my other pedals and amp sizzle a bit more without being harsh.
great for classic rock and blues stuff.

Reliability : 10
dunno but you would think it to be a tough pedal.

Customer Support : 10
Ive heard good things.

Overall Rating : 10
Ive been playing for about 20 years and am a professional player.
We do the cover band thing for the most part aswell as other side projects.

I consider myself a true tonehound in every sense of the word, spend my time on amp and pedal forums alot because I just love all things tone.
this pedal is a keeper,
big tone, bass boost switch which is a good feature for combo amps,
lots of gain on tap, [I run mine with volume at amp unity and gain at 12 o'clock, tone at 3/4.
if you have a good amplifier and are happy with your base tone, this pedal will take you into tone heaven.

If youre not happy with yours, chances are youre playing the wrong amp, amps n cabs/speakers are at least 70 percent of your overall sound so get with the program.
If you dont believe me, try this.
play a cheap guitar through a cheap amp aswell as the most expensive guitar you can find. then repeat this with the same guitars but through a good amp. voila.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: USD 125
Submitted 10/22/2006 at 04:04pm by TieDyedDevil

Ease of Use : 8
Not plug-and-play, but neither is it rocket science.

Sound Quality : 8
I play a semi-hollow guitar into a Fender amp.

I like the range of adjustment that's available on both the OD and comp sides of this box. My "normal" settings tend to be on the low end of the range of the drive and sustain controls. Higher settings can be musically useful, but I don't have as much use for these sounds (saturated OD and serious "squish").

The tone controls are a nice touch.

The bass boost switch can add some girth to the OD. This is really nice for playing at lower volumes. The boost becomes a bit overwhelming as the amp volume goes up; this shouldn't be a surprise to anyone who has figured out that they need to turn down their amp's bass control at higher volumes.

The buffer sounds really good to me. I think I can hear a small difference between the buffered signal compared to plugging my guitar straight into the amp, but it's subtle and not at all unpleasant. The complaint that I have about most buffered pedals -- that the high-end is veiled -- is definitely not present with Visual Sound's buffer.

The other nice thing about a good buffered pedal is that you get absolutely clean switching with none of the glitches or pops that seem to be unavoidable with true-bypass switching.

Reliability : No Opinion
It's too early to tell how well this'll hold up with long-term use.

Customer Support : 9
I had a question about the pedal and was very pleased with the rapid, courteous and thorough responses to my emails.

Overall Rating : 8
I play improvised fingerstyle guitar, drawing freely from old-school rock, folk, jazz and classical styles. I first picked up the guitar in the mid-`60s, and have been playing "seriously" for the past six years.

My main rig is a Koll Custom DL Thinline through a Fender Vibro-King. I have a small assortment of special-purpose pedals in addition to the recently-added Visual Sound Route 66 and H2O. If the Visual Sound pedals hold up under regular use, I may consider selling the rest of my pedals.

The most important things to me are that the pedal sounds good and is easy to adjust.

The real stroke of genius is packaging two related effects in a single pedal with the stomp switches close together. With one press you can turn either or both effects on or off or toggle between one effect and the other.

The "home plate" shape of the pedals may also be useful. I have both the Route 66 and the H2O and have experimented with placing them at 45 degrees to each other so all the stomp switches are in a cluster. I've been able to toggle useful combinations of three or four switches at once.



Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: UNKNOWN
Submitted 09/05/2006 at 03:46pm by Rusty
Email: rmorphew at otelco<dot>net

Ease of Use : 8
The Visual Sound product line is basically 2 pedals in 1. The Route 66 is a Tube Screamer like OD and a compressor in one unit. Fairly easy to use indiviually, but takes a little tweaking to set up the OD and compressor to complement each other when both are turned on.

Sound Quality : 9
I use this with several guitars including a '73 Les Paul Deluxe, a Strat clone Frankenstien I built myself, and an ES-335 clone with Seymour Duncan Pearly Gate PUP's. I have used the Route 66 with my Mesa Boogie Mark 3 and a little solid state practice amp I use at home. It obviously sounds better with the Boogie, but even makes the little practice amp very sweet.
The OD is very Tube Screamer like (I think they even use the same OP Amps as the old Tube Screamers). It won't do metal distortion, but I wouldn't expect it to, since its an overdrive. I can get a very thick grindy type of tone similar to Billy Gibbons with the Les Paul. SRV tones are also avaialble using the Strat clone.
The compressor is very fun. With full saturation and the gain set so that there is no volume boost when it kicks on, a full almost infinite sustain is available. I get a sweet musical feedback on sustained notes even at moderate volumes with the Boogie and this compressor. It makes leads jump out in the mix with a full band. Running clean and using the strat, this compression setting produces a very authentic spanky country chicken pickin' tone.

Reliability : 8
All metal construction, it is very solid. I did have a problem with the compressor footswitch, but I'll cover that in the Customer Support section. Otherwise, I see this thing lasting a long time.

Customer Support : 10
As I said, the footswitch for the compressor started acting up. I suspected the footswitch and planned to replace it. I sent an Email to the Visual Sound website outlining the symptoms and asking if there was anything special about the switch or if I could replace it with one from the local electronics shop. Within a couple of hours I had a reply confiming that the switch was the likely culprit and instructions for how to replace it. The rep siad there was nothing special about the switch except it needed to have a long enough neck to reach through the housing. He said to send my mailing address and he would ship me one. 2 days later the switch showed up and it took all of 30 minutes to swap out. Problem solved and I didn't even have to pay shipping.
This is my first review. As good as these pedals sound (I also have a Visual Sound H2O liquid chorus/delay pedal which also sounds great), it was the great customer service that really prompted me to submit this review.

Overall Rating : 10
I play in a classic rock cover band, in a 2 man acoustic project, as well as classical and gospel music at my church. I've been playing for about 25 or so years (you would think I would be a better player than I am after all that time; oh well....). I have used this pedal in all those situations (except the classical music in church). I would definitely replace if lost or stolen. I normally view a 10 rating on this site a little skeptically, at least until I read the review and see what it was based on. I would give the OD a solid 7 or 8 if it were an individual pedal, and the compressor an 8 individually. But with both in one reasonably priced pedal, and with the awesome cutomer service to boot, I have to give the Route 66 a 10 overall.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $129
Submitted 05/17/2006 at 08:16pm by Erich Gruber

Ease of Use : 7
The individual effects are easy to use, combining them can be tricky, but, there are some incredible results available when doing so.

Sound Quality : 8
8 is very good for me. I don't give anything a 10. The compressor can be very transparent by kicking in the tone feature and dialing in. The sustain feature works well w/o sucking hi freqs too much.

The overdrive is classic ts808 with more, more volume and more bass.

One of the best things about this pedal is how clean the throughput is. I was skeptical, but it really does make my downstream effects sound better.

Reliability : No Opinion
Seems to be built like a masonary commode, but I haven't had it very long

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I play funk, gospel, blues, jazz. This pedal in front of my THD Univalve turned that rig into a 3 channel tone machine. I'm very happy -- the value to cost ratio is over the top on this box.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $140
Submitted 02/11/2006 at 08:35pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
It's easy. I didn't look for or at a manual. I didn't check the upgrade status but I looks like a more recent rev than the one pictured here. Mine has two black switches on the top.

Sound Quality : 10
I did a side by side comparison with four overdrive pedals. I think I'm pretty tone sensitive. For the test I used a new Gibson SG and some kind of boutique blackface circuit amp that had fancy decorations. I compared it to the Prescription Electronics and Maxon overdrives. All three sounded good. This one was my favorite because I liked the sound and the combination of overdrive and compression.

Currently I use it with a little 66 Princeton hotrod blackface, and a Martin electric. I'm very happy with the range of sounds.

Reliability : No Opinion
Don't know yet.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Couldn't say.

Overall Rating : 10
I've been playing for a long time and I'd love to share all kinds of data with you about who I am and what I spend money on. I did compare it with many other products. It helps me make music. It also helps my housemates question why they choose to live with a guy who enjoys the sound of feedback and overdriven vintage tube amps. Try that on for your psychographic profiling.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $90$ used
Submitted 01/02/2006 at 02:41am by jvbarnes

Ease of Use : 10
Its got three knobs for each effect....turn them until you like what you hear, eventually you'll learn the limitations and extremes of each knobs function. Its that simple, two effects, three knobs each, spin'em until it sounds good and then try combiniong the two effects for more sustain or boost etc etc. Its up to you!

Sound Quality : 5
It really doesnt matter what I use because Im writing a review of this effect. I have a myriad of SC and Humbucker guitars, around 12 classic amps and too damn many effects ranging from "boo-tique" to "pawn shop prize" to list and really have no desire to write a little "Vanity" review by listing my gear. Im talking about the Route 66!

The bottom line, this is a very afforable generic double effect box built in an overseas Pacific Rim country, complete with generic sounds and a generic build. The "feet" and "battery" cover are nothing special and could easily be improved on, but are not as bad as some FX boxes.

Its good for Monday night jams for dragging along one box with two FX when nothing very critical is on the line or for sitting on the practice/work bench next to your favorite guitar, PC, amp and CD player. Sitting in the bedroom next to your Crate or PV amp is a good place for it too. The shame of it is, it could really be GOOD...and I dont care HOW NICE the guy as VS is to talk too about his product, he needs to quit talking and upgrade his OD and Compressor with better parts, components and redesign the stupid box...then even I would have something to talk to him about.

I REALLY REALLY like the idea he has here (OD plus COMP in one box) but what a shame that its so generic and dull sounding and the box is folded alum in a weird shape that was built to specifically accomodate no known pedal board. I wont eve discuss the painted graphics that disappear in days after you useit a few times. The Comp is only slightly better than the OD and the OD is basic generic OD. But, its only a few pennies or a couple of dollars in parts from being GREAT, so WHY doesnt he do it!! You figure it out!! I'd buy one mmediately!

Reliability : 5
I have many backups, non by VS though for the reasons above. The H2O could be cool too, but for the same reasons its the same generic deal.I'll give a generic 5 since thats the key here.

Customer Support : 5
Who cares, Id talk if he wants to improve it. DOES ANYBODY MOD THESE! Id pay good money for that. Imagine the sound of really sweet TS od coupled with a Maxon Comp. Wow! Im not saying they are THE best, just a huge improvement over generic.......Rt 66! And they have the nuts to name this box built in Koreapanpines after the hiway I LIVE A MILE FROM IN THE USA! again...a generic 5 rating

Overall Rating : 5
Nothing about what i do or what I play matters, this a review of a pedal I thought MIGHT work for me and I hoped it would have!

>>>Its a great box to take to the Monday night jam along with two cords and one guitar unless you get there and theres something REAL cool to plug into. Except its hard to pack in anything since its shaped like a Yield sign. Come on guys, take the leap and use your money to upgrade these pedals!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $120
Submitted 12/28/2005 at 12:10pm by Rick

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy to use, all analog controls (nice), 3 controls for the OD and 3 controls for the compressor and 2 tone switches, and the pedal switch for each. I set the gain and volume on mine so that there is minimal change in volume switching it in and out. Just use your ears and the rest is easy.


Sound Quality : 10
I play jazz guitar on various archtops, I wanted to "beef up" the tone and sustain a little without going overboard or adding distortion. I use the compressor alone when playing solo chord/melody style ballads, with these types of arrangements the chords can get too thick with OD, the compressor adds sustain without robbing clarity. BUT, I use both stages, the compressor and OD, when doing single-line soloing. This is just the ticket for me because I dont want distortion playing jazz but do want that little bit of "hair" on the tone that adds richness behind a vocalist, etc. I keep the tone controls on mine below 12 o'clock to get a nice jazz tone, I keep drive at minimum, gain below 12 o'clock and volume at a level that does not cause me to have to re-adjust the guitar volume when clicking it out. I get a nice Pat Martino or Jimmy Raney tone with this thing, I like it a lot. This effect is capable of being subtle and it's all analog which generally sounds better than digital as it does not have that "thinness" nor rob dynamic range like digital effecs usually do.


Reliability : 10
Built like the proverbial brick #$%@ house.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never needed support.


Overall Rating : 10
I play jazz guitar and it is a good box to have because it can be subtle. I use very few other effects, I believe tone is mostly in the hands of the player. I would replace this if lost. I really have no complaints about it once you understand the logic behind how the controls operate. I heard a sound clip of this on Reverend web site and liked it. It is subtle enough that I dont have to change my playing technique to us it, a plus. I like the bass boost switch as it will really warm up the tone kind of like the Joe Pass recordings where he accompanied Ella Fitzgerald solo. I like getting 2 effects for the price of one.




Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $135.00
Submitted 12/14/2005 at 12:05pm by Bolko

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy, just work few minutes and use your ears.

Sound Quality : 10
Excellent, nothing to complain about. You guys who have just tasted some sounds should keep your mouth shut. It is one of the best OD in the world. I hate to read your complaints, you should rather play golf instead of guitar and use your ears instead of .ss.

Reliability : 10
Its great, built like a tank.

Customer Support : 10
Best ever.

Overall Rating : 10
I have played everything in 40 years. RT66 has great organic sounds for real, talented musicians. There are only artists who can really appreciate it. It helps my music a lot. It really pisses me off to read hundreds of words you most guys use to write about the things you are not capable to hear, know and understand. You should be banned from this site.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US NA
Submitted 12/01/2005 at 06:13pm by MarkF

Ease of Use : 10
As easy as pie to use. Noboby should have any trouble using either side of this pedal. All the controls do exactly what they say. Getting a good sound is easy. If you are using the compressor for a bit of clean boost, just toggle between having the compressor on and off, and then set the gain accordingly for the amount of boost you want. As for the overdrive side, it is an overdrive! Not much to understand there. More gain = more distortion! It can be set for a slight breakup or for a much gnarlier sound. Turn on the bass boost switch and you will be rewarded with a huge, beefy sound.

Sound Quality : 10
I use a Godin LGX-SA or a Parker Fly Deluxe running into a Visual Sound Jekyll and Hyde pedal. This runs into the Route 66, then to a Visual Sound H20 pedal, then into a Digitech JamMan, then into a Yamaha Magic Stomp (for the amp models). From here it goes straight to the PA system. The Pure Tone circuit really keeps things strong and clean, especially while running so many pedals. I run the Jekyll and Hyde first because Bob Weil told me it gives a different sound to run a distortion before a compressor. He is right.
The only bad sounds one can coax from this pedal is if you turn the compression too high with too much gain on the overdrive side. This will be noisy (as it would be for any setup like this, no matter the brand of pedals). Otherwise, it is hard to get a bad sound from this pedal. Use some compression for a bit of clean boost, or for smoothing out those transients. Use the overdrive side for that old Tube Screamer sound.

Reliability : 10
Rock solid construction. I would definitely use it without a backup.

Customer Support : 10
Best in the business. They will quickly answer emails. They are very friendly on the phone, too.

Overall Rating : 10
I play adult contemporary Christian-themed music that is very guitar oriented. This pedal is the basis of my main sound. I would definitely get another one if I lost this one. It has a classic tone that I love, and is very versatile as well. You should buy one of these pedals; you will not be sorry!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $75.00 used
Submitted 11/15/2005 at 07:36am by Jon R.

Ease of Use : 8
Two effects in one pedal...Overdrive and compression. Three knobs on each along with a selector switch. Compression is very easy to use and get a great sound out of. The overdrive not as much.

Sound Quality : 8
I use a Fender Strat w/ Duncan Hot Rails into the Rt. 66->Fab Distortion->Modified Crybaby Wah->Cool Cat Chorus->Ibanez DE7 Delay->Peavey Heritage VTX. Like I said before, the compressor is great, I added in a little high end with the tone and really brought my sound to life. On the overdrive side, there is no clean to be found. I understand this is an overdrive, but there was a bit too much for me even with the drive all the way off. The bass boost gives the overdrive too much, really muddies up the tone. I sent this off to Keeley to get modified, and now it sounds fantastic. Stock, was wishing that I had kept my OD-3.

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank, quality parts.

Customer Support : 10
Quick with the e-mails for general questions.

Overall Rating : 9
Having the two effects together is great, you can step on both switches at the same time. The compressor really helps to develop your overall sound. If you get this pedal, send it immediately to Keeley to get the overdrive modified, you will not be disappointed.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $75.00 used
Submitted 09/06/2005 at 07:57am by CloverdaleBand

Ease of Use : 10
EZ as pie...

Sound Quality : 10
The point of this review...As VS recommends, I placed the 66 first in my signal chain...I had avoided doing this before as I did not want OD before my Wah...I did, however, want the compressor, and decided to take a shot and see if Bob was telling the truth about the "Pure Bypass" circuit...He claims that placing this pedal first in your chain will buffer everything else and improve your sound...I had been having trouble with my 6 pedal setup, noise, hiss, etc...I placed the 66 first, then as follows: Dunlop 535Q Wah->Zoom PD-01 Boost/OD->Zoom HL-01 Distortion->Voodoo Lab Analog Chorus-> Peavey DDL-1 Digital Delay...All powered by a VS One Spot...Wired them up with George L's and THE HISS IS GONE...Just to see if this was a fluke, I took the 66 out and the sound deteriorated...The circuit really seems to work...The rest of my chain is dead quiet...

As for the effects in the pedal, I have finally made peace with the compressor...It sounds just right now that I have it dialed in...Works great in front of the Wah...The OD is okay, and I set it for lighter OD...I do not use it as my main OD/Boost, as that assignment belongs to the Zoom PD-01, after the Wah...the Zoom is just so good as the eq and clarity are superior to anything else I have ever tried...Having said that, let me emphasize that the Route 66 is a great pedal, even if you only use it for the compressor and "Pure Bypass" functons...Most folks really love the OD as well, I am just spoiled...

Reliability : 10
I feel it is very roadworthy and I have it in a NYC pedalboard...

Customer Support : 10
The best...Called them with a couple of questions recently and they were great...A plug here too for the One-Spot...Just a great power solution for very little money...After searching for years for a pedalboard power source, let alone an affordable one, this thing is just unbelieveable...it is both functional and economical...The daisy chain and adaptors work perfectly...I recently bought a second one just to have on hand...

Overall Rating : 10
I play classic rock and this pedal is very useful in my set-up...I can get the compressed quack, slam my wah and chorus, and a little volume boost with the compressor...The OD is great for light OD sounds, and as detailed above, the "Pure Bypass" solved my pedalboard noise troubles...I wish Bob would make some "split" pedals, for those of use who want them, but I understand his marketing plan...I like VS just because they are who they are, and they provide good affordable products and great service...


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: free from co worker
Submitted 09/02/2005 at 07:37am by p

Ease of Use : 10
2 switches, 3 knobs for each. not so bad if you've got some experience.

Sound Quality : 10
i've never been much of a comp. guy, but this one is great. (unfortunately, this pedal is old, and the comp switch is starting to go bad, but to that later....)

the distortion is more of a rock/ "marshall" type of sound, and it's great. boost is good, infact better than the j&hyde, which i also own.

Reliability : 10
this thing is beat to hell and still going.

Customer Support : 10
a true 10. website is very informative, they have support by phone, email, plus can im via aim. responded within a few hours about switch going bad... with very reasonable repair cost via company.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
i got this free from a coworker. he's more into metal- he gave me this. it's a few years old, pretty beat, but still works well and sounds good. the comp switch is sometimes iffy, but i'll get that fixed. i love this pedal. doesn't really have enough gain if you're strictly into metal, but works well for alt rock, rock, classic rock, blues, etc.....the comp is great for both clean and distorted applications. customer service for vs is beyond belief!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $140.00
Submitted 08/21/2005 at 07:48pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
No brainer. This subject is really pointless to discuss in relation to this product

Sound Quality : 7
A bit noisy (the compressor adds a little hiss) but the idea here is that you get two effects in one...compression and overdrive. Both aren't bad but they don't measure up to something nice like a Keeley compressor and a tube screemer pedal separate. I would say though that since the price is about the same as a typical tube screamer it's worth having the compressor built in for the same money. The fact that it adds a little hiss doesn't make the feature not worth having. Anybody buying a tube screamer should buy this pedal instead for the added compressor feature and the same price...but I have to say that it doesn't compete with buying two separate pedals....

Reliability : 9
seems well built...hard to tell because it's new.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 7
It sounds like your typical unmodded TS-9 with an added compressor. Not bad...If you are thinking about buying a tube screamer I would recommend buying this instead. If you were thinking about buying a Keeley compressor and combining it with a Keeley modded TS-9 or Klon pedal or something, don't kid yourself that this is just as good.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $140
Submitted 07/19/2005 at 02:23pm by jared
Email: jdsoccer3<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 10
easy to get used t.. A few controls. If you know how to read your pretty much all set. can be kinda tough to eliminate feedback when both are kicked in.

Sound Quality : 10
It gets noisy or feedback when everything is boosted. If you want sustain this is the pedal for you. this is all you need to sound a lot like trey anastasio. comp. alone is very clean. kick in the OD and its a beast.

Reliability : 10
i can depend on this thing. if someone stole it id probly cry .

Customer Support : 10
VISUAL SOUNDS COSTERMER SUPPORT IS AWESOME. Just today i had a question. I didnt even have to email them they have a screenname that they respond to instantly.

Overall Rating : 10
i play jam and rock. its quick to switch channels and has a good sound. iv got a 1970 sg and when it runs thru this its sweet. its also great for les pauls cuz ther heavy which gives you even more sustain ( i really like sustain)


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: 115 (euro) used
Submitted 06/22/2005 at 11:24am by STEVE

Ease of Use : 8
This pedal is very easy to use. You can put it any way you like it. BUT, then, you can misuse it too. if you mess around too much with the tone knob, ik may get mudded up, or too sharp. The compressor part is quit subtle, it takes a while to find your own tone. The overdrive part is pretty straightforward.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using this with an starfire special by DeArmond. r66 is first in line, then comes a Boss SD-1 whijch will be replaced by a delay soon. It runs into an Hughes and Kettner Edition tube amp. In this setup the compressor can make my guitar sound ultra clean, or give it a crisp thats on the edge of distortion. It beefens up, boosts, cleans, or sustains my sound at wish. It can get a little bit noisy when you put the sustain and the gain control on the comp way hi, combining it with a lot of gain from the od part.

Reliability : 10
I Can depend on this pedal in every situation. It is sturdy and so are the switches and knobs. The only thing that may happen is your battery running out. Thats why I use it with an adaptor. I do have a battery in it for if my adaptor gives up.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Wel I never dealt with them, but their site is neat

Overall Rating : 9
I play blues, and espacially the darker and fatter tones are perfect. I play in a coverband too, and the cleaner sounds are good for that. Because my guitar has a higher output level than a strat or tele, I don't get the SRV tones, but thats not what I'm after anyway.If it were stolen, I'd go to the store, buy a baseball bat and 5 inch nails. I'd put the nails in the top of the bat, and track down the thief. That is, after I had gotten a new r66. I compared the comp to the Boss CS-3 and the marshall Edward the compressor. The r66 beat em both. It helps me have an original sound. This is a WONDERFUL pedal.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 05/03/2005 at 06:04pm by SwineDog

Ease of Use : 10
Straight forward to use - see other descriptions

Sound Quality : 9
This pedal works great with my setup - Small class A amp and strat, LP, or melody maker. Set the amp so its on the edge of breaking up with a good bark; Step on the OD side to add harmonics and volume. The compression sounds great with my axe in the clean input for a little treble boost.

Reliability : 7
I've used this pedal for four years without a hitch until recently; See below

Customer Support : 10
This is why I'm writing this ... I had a problem with the compression side, so I Emailed Visual Sound. Had a reply the next day with an idea of what to check. They were right on! Not only that, but when I told them what it was, they sent me the parts to repair it (two pots), FREE OF CHARGE!!! This pedal's four years old! Been playing 20+ years and I don't know ANY other company that would do that. We need to support companys like this that support us.

Overall Rating : 10
I like this pedal. I've owned many OD pedals in my travels, including a Big Muff (an original back when they first came out), and I still have two Boss OD-1's, but this is probably the most versatile and touch sensitive.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: $200.00 (Cdn)
Submitted 04/02/2005 at 04:25pm by Ian

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy to use, dosen't take long to tweak and set-up.
Hardly looked at the manual, it's a stompbox!!! Compression on one side....Od on the other!!

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using this with a brand spankin' new Americian Ash Telecaster,JD Crybaby,and a Fender DRRI, George L's cables throughout,(I ordered the H20 pedal from Reverend yesterday)
It DOES get a bit noisy when the compression is engaged with the OD, but thats the nature of the beast!! Otherwise it's pretty quiet.
The Comp side is VERY transparent compared to my DynaComp,great Nashvile/Mason squish. It's actually great period;Funk,R'nB,Rockabilly,ect. The Tone knob really lets you add edge to your sound if needed.
The OD side,to me, is pure SRV!!! Very usable and musical TS-808 tones to be had. The Bass Boost switch is really cool. In the Off position, you get nice OD, but ON you get a fuller tone. Both are really useable.Nice touch!!!

Reliability : 9
Used it last night w/ no backup!!! Seems strudy enough!!

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt w/ Visual Sound,haven't had a problem yet.

Overall Rating : 10
I play...well...Telecaster music!!! Lots of Country,Blues,Rockabilly,Rn'B,Funk,Jazz,Cajin,Soul...that kinda stuff.
Been playing @ 20yrs.
Have 4 Tele's ,60's Strat,Dano Baritone,Harmony Lap Steel,Mandolins,ect.
This box is MADE for Telecasters!!!! It mates soooo well with the Music I like to play.
I tried to think of somthing negative to say, but I just can't!!! Sorry!!!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: 125 (Euro)
Submitted 03/11/2005 at 03:28am by Tom Lanjouw

Ease of Use : 9
Nice,warm, and clear overdrive, very nice compressor, also useable as a booster kind of thing. The setup is 2 pedals in one, both separately switchable, very sturdy switches, metal chassis, nice clear led-indicators and it looks the bussiness!

Sound Quality : 9
I heard about some very interesting upgrades for this pedal but I'm very pleased with its sound so I think it isn't important to upgrade this piece!

Sound quality of the overdrive is an approach of a tubescreamer with a nicer bass-response, a bass-boost is switchable to create some realy nice SRV-like tones, wich is very nice with any single-coil-equipped guitar!

The compressor is very nice for all theclean tones, with this compressor your guitar will become alive, it will sound clearer and you will have even more sustain, BUT when you mess with the controls you will sound terrible, simply set all the comp control at 12'o'clock and you're done......

Reliability : 5
After a few months I had some trouble with the power supply,so I was determined to use batteries!!!!!! I hope I can fix this problem because this unit EATES power!!!!

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/A

Overall Rating : 8
Very nice unit!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $110
Submitted 02/25/2005 at 09:53pm by steve

Ease of Use : 9
It is easy to use but there is always a little adjusting of guitar amp and pedal to find the sweet spots to your liking. Many pedals are like that.
I have the first generation Rt 66, there is a newer one with a few more features.

Sound Quality : 10
I was dissapointed with the overdrive side of this pedal. The compressor side was very good.
The compressor is a bit noisy with single coil pickups and quiet with humbuckers. Shielding the cavity of the guitar may solve the noise problem . Talk to an amp/guitar techy or call Visual Sound to find out if that will solve the noise problem with single coils.
I use humbuckers so no noise. I use a 9 volt AC adaptor power supply 500 ma or 800 miliamps both work well. Make sure your adaptor is (-) negative center like it says on the pedal.
The sound of the overdrive was not good and had unwanted trailing tones . I would give the pedal about a 7 until modification. Nice idea a double pedal at reasonable price.
After an Indyguitarist mod the pedal gets a 10.
It now sounds like real blooming tube tones and better than many tube amps. I play mostly through an old 80 watt Peavey Bandit with a 10 inch Scorpion speaker ,transistors no tubes, a killer amp for no tubes. Playing leads with the compressor and drive on sounds great with the gear cranked a bit. Excellent note articulation and I would use it for recording. It has a warm sound not harsh , the clipping is a little tame compared to a a Jacques Tube Blower or a Ibanez Tube Screamer 9 DX Turbo. The RT-66 will put your gear on steroids .
Before the modification it was just another pedal, the mod was the magic.
If you can solder and are skillful you can get a mod kit or send it in www.indyguitarist.com , I got a kit and was amazed at the sound improvement, fantastic.
The bass switch adds to the tone control but is less noticable if your amp is turned down, a great feature.
The newer geration RT -66 has more features but the basic circuit is the same with the same components so the new ones would sound better with the modification too. Warm tubes to crunchy overdriven tubes with great tone.

Reliability : 10
It is a solid unit , the pots, jacs and switches are very good, well built.

Customer Support : 10
Excellent, Bob the company owner responded to a couple of E mails.

Overall Rating : 10
I play mostly finger slide blues rock, blues, rock and R+B.
The RT -66 has great versatility, you can get a lot of great sounds with it.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $125
Submitted 02/07/2005 at 02:30pm by Robert Cooper
Email: rcooper<at>pcnh dot com

Ease of Use : 9
I bought this unit because it has both compression and overdrive in one unit. On the overdrive side you have level, tone and gain volume ocntrols plus a bass boost switch. On the comp side you get level, tone and gain plus a tone on/off switch. Each effect has its own bypass switck so you can use them separately or together. LEDs tell you when they are on... green for the OD, red for the Comp. The manual is basically a sheet that tells you what the knobs do and gives a couple of sample setups. The comp sounds awesome, you basically just need to turn it on. I use it almost all the time.

Sound Quality : 9
I use a Roland JC 120 and G&L guitars. I have an ASAT and an SC-3. I use the ASAT mainly on a weekly gig. We play mostly country/rock and songwriter stuff. I generally switch the comp on with the level at about 11 o'clock, the tone at 2 o'clock and the gain about 10 o'clock. I roll off the mids on my amp and keep the brite swtich on. The reverb ont he JC is just creamy dreamy so with the comp is get a super punchy warm tone. flip to the brdge PU and it snaps at your heals like testy pitbull. On solos I tap in the OD and hold on. It has taken me a little while to get my sound the way I like it, but I am very happy with this combination. I will sometimes punch in some delay. I will say that the comp is noisy so I turn down between songs, but the effect is one of the best I have heard.

Reliability : 9
I use a One-Spot daisy chain AC adapter so my effects are always dependable. I have had problems with the LEDs sometimes they won't come on when I kick in the effect. But that is a minor detail. The unit is put together very well I think. I have had it for about a year and I use it all the time.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I have been playing most of my life and am currently involved in a couple of projects. One is Western Swing group. One is a jazz trio and then the bar gig. I bought this unit because I wanted to be able to get a nice tone for solos without having to run an overdriven amp all the time. I can pcik and choose between straight, clean comp sound and a nice edgy OD that seems to really please the audience. I t is a great combination for someone who really doesn't like having a big complicated set up. I have not tried it with a tube amp but I can only imagine that it would perform well.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: (ero)
Submitted 02/07/2005 at 03:49am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
Pretty straight forward if you know what you are doing. pretty good sugestions come with it.
You really have to spend some time tweaking to get the sounds you want, and adjusting for your amp and guitar.
the newest moddel has various upgrades and so sounds slightly better.

Sound Quality : 8
i bought this for the compression mostly, as i wanted to beef up my sound a bit and get more sustain. I tryed alot of compressors, and intrestingly not all where as noisy as this, (HBE,maxon,T-rex, i liked alot) but accordingly there is less scope to change the sound adn they are more expencive, (they seem to be more for transparent sustain) i really wanted to squash the sound a little when i want, and found that if set conservativly the 66 could get pretty transparent, as stated below to me the 66 does seem to cut cirtan frequencies a little bit, which is strange as like the JH there is a pure tone (suposed to stop tone sucking of other pedels) in the 66. this is better than a dynacomp, there are no vol swells (before the note) and the comp is richer and smoother (it shimers a little). As for a ross (or modded dynacomp,[comprosser]) i am not too sure, but have been told that they are about the same.
The OD for me is pretty dam good. giging i am useing varities of tube amps (mesa's, H&k's, marshals, fenders) at home i am useig a H&k blue 15r (solidstaate). The 66 goes very well with all the tube amps i have tryed so far, and now i don't play without it. and with the OD it is really the only pedel i need. but the 66 also does wonders for my HK 15r at home. i haven't found any OD/distortion/compressor that can better the gain channel on the amp, and actually this is no diffrent, but as there is no footswitch for the amp (why oh why) this comes pretty close, and provides a lot of variety.
I can dial in clean boosts, distorted boosts pretty much whetever i want, on both the OD and comp, infact there lots of possiblites, and the only way to know is to try it out yourself. as i was looking for a comp i too would be extreamly happy if VS brought out a doubble comp unit (though i would prefer if they where slightly diffrent, [like the bicomprosser])as i leave the comp on all the time, then i culd use one to boost for solos etc, and any distortion/OD would come from my JH.

Reliability : 8
thicker caseing then the old one.
don't like the gaps,
i also dont like the switches.
but i think it will last a long time yet

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I play mostly (light distortion) rock, reggae, ambient, and sometimes metal (just for the money).
for the money this is a great unit, and i would recomend to gigging, and bed room guitarests (it is a little too noisy for recording but it works OK), especially people looking for value for money. However, In my opinion the OD is not the best out there, the comp is also not the best out there, but for the money i didn't find better, and I really like my 66, i use it with an EQ and with this i can think of a sound i want and i can get it pretty quick. The unit can be noisy, (if you set it stupidly) but i have used it in conjunction with the VS JH with everything on (nothing set past 12) and i had no problems, so as it says in the instructions if you set it too high then you will get noise,


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $85
Submitted 01/26/2005 at 08:47pm by Eric V.
Email: EVEykel<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 9
It is pretty easy to get nice tones out of this pedal. The manual actually comes with some pretty nice presets that, after a little tweaking, can sound pretty decent on any amp.

Sound Quality : 9
I'm running a 1980s American strat into a Nick Greer Sonic boom then out to a DD-3, DD-5, DL-4, Voodoo Lab Tremolo and Electro Harmonix Small Stone. For my amp I use a Reverend Hellhound 40/60 Combo. The pedal isn't that noisy when you are using the sides separately. When you kick in the compression side and the distortion side, however, get ready for some hissing. It is very very very noisy when both sides are used simultaneously. But, there is an easy fix for this...don't use both sides at the same time.

Reliability : 10
Seems to be well built. I haven't had any problems yet.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $100
Submitted 01/17/2005 at 04:31pm by Chris Manuel
Email: chrispmanuel at mac<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
Really easy to dial in - I've been using multieffects for years (still happy with my Boss GT-3) and I also use a Mesa Mk IV. Both are tweaker's favourites but I was looking for something that would work in a quick and dirty jam setup with a Deluxe Reverb. It's so much easier to setup and get a couple of really useful tones.

Sound Quality : 8
I don't think of this as a recording tool, but as a live tool. As such it sounds really good! Sure, it's a little noisy with the compressor pumping away but for live, that's pretty much buried under the cymbals.

It has a really nice tactile feel to it - when used with my Deluxe Reverb with gain at around 4 it takes you to the "can do no wrong" playing place. Not easy to reach in a jam setup so it makes this a really useful device.


Reliability : No Opinion
I haven't used it for very long so I can't comment. Looks pretty solid though.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 8
For blues, rock and fusiony jazz jamming I'm finding this a very useful pedal. It's really easy to get a useful sound. Nice and fat without going to squealing feedback to easily.

I've used the gain channel on several Boogies for lead tones and still love them but find their a little finicky to set up for a drop in kind of jam. This Route 66 is great for that setup.

I'd replace this if stolen and would recommend it to anyone who's looking for a compact, versatile, easy-to-use overdrive/compressor combination.

I'd give higher points if it was studio quiet but for the money and the intended application it really does a good job.

Two thumbs up!!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $120 something
Submitted 11/12/2004 at 11:38am by Tom

Ease of Use : 9
It's a pedal with a few controls. You plug in and fiddle with knobs. Easy to make it do what it does.

Sound Quality : 5
I was really disappointed by it. I use a tele into a Blues Junior and I usually play uneffected. The effects I have are a Maxon OD808 tubescreamer and a Danelectro PB&J mini delay pedal, both accessed in their own loop of a Loooper switching pedal. That means when I play clean my signal goes straight thru the Loooper pedal to the amp and the signal only goes to either pedal when I access it from the Loooper.
I've owned or used a number of tubescreamers and this Route 66 did not work like any of them. Usually I can set a tubescreamer so that it sounds pretty close to the clean sound (a little bass loss sometimes), and then add drive or volume to suit so when accessed it sounds like my guitar and amp 'beefed up', but with the underlying sound of the guitar fairly unchanged. I think they call that 'transparent'. The Route 66 didn't do that. It changed the whole tone and timbre of the instrument, and even turned right down there was still alot of drive. Too much. And the bass boost was a joke. I put the Route 66 in one Loooper loop and my Maxon 808 in the other to A/B them. There was very little bass loss with the Maxon (about the same as the Ibanez TS9 reissue I used to have). But with the Route 66 turned on there was ALOT of bass loss. And when I turned on the bass boost switch which was supposed to add the bass back in there was STILL loss of bass compared to the Maxon...or having the Route 66 turned off. It added LOW MID frequencies. Not bass. I checked and rechecked and it was unmistakable. Loss of low end even with the bass boost on.
Then I A/B compared the Route 66 and it's 'true bypass' when turned off with by alternating the signal straight to the amp through the Loooper and then thru the loop with the turned off pedal. There was a BIG difference in tone. It was much more trebly going thru the turned off Route 66 than going straight to the amp. And I was using short, good quality cables.
I LIKE my clean sound. I don't want a pedal to change it. That's the whole point of having a 'true bypass'. 'Buffered' my arse.
And as for the compressor, there was so much crackling and noise when I turned it on...and I was so annoyed with the overdrive and the 'bypass'...that I didn't even bother trying to get it to work for me.
I packed it up and put it for sale on ebay.
I hope the guy who bought it likes it better than I did.
I'll stick with my Maxon.

Reliability : 7
It was generally well built...but when I first got it the on/off switch for the compressor crackled. I carefully pushed it a few times listening to it....and the switch failed. Before I had a chance to actually use it. I had to ship it back to the company via the seller to get it fixed. It was when I got it back the second time that I was able to actually try it out and discover that I didn't like it.
Not their fault, I suppose, in this case. Just unfortunate for me.
It seemed OK otherwise.
But I'll knock a couple points off for the switch failure anyway.
It did crackle the very first time I used it so they probably should have noticed it before I bought it.
Actually I'll take off 3 points for that...

Customer Support : 8
See 'Reliability' above.
They fixed it as their policy said they would. Pity I had to pay for the shipping.

Overall Rating : 5

Other people may like it and they are welcome to do so. I'm only stating my personal opinion.
And I say 'good riddance' to it.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $120
Submitted 10/04/2004 at 01:41pm by Arjuna

Ease of Use : 10
Probably the easiest to use compressor or overdrive pedal out there. The manual is only "so-so" though. You really need to play with this thing and experiment to get the sound you want. However, unlike other compressor pedals, this experimentation process only takes a few minutes, as opposed to DAYS for some of the other units.

Sound Quality : 7
I play my telecaster through this thing and, since I bought the Route 66 over a year ago, I really haven't played my tele without using the compressor side of this pedal. The compressor just brings my telecaster to life -- I love it. I also love the bass boost, which significantly takes out the "ice pick" on the high E string when I have it cut in. However, I really don't like the overdrive section -- it sounds too phoney for me. Soooo, great compression -- great bass boost -- poor overdrive -- only gets a "7" in the sound category for a pedal that is advertised as a dual-use pedal.

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank -- gig freely without a backup here as long as you have the "One spot" DC convertor and plug it into an AC outlet.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never dealt with the company.

Overall Rating : 8
I love this pedal for the compression and bass boost it gives me. I've been through a few compressors in the past and they all came up short until I found the Route 66. However, the overdrive on this thing is lackluster at best. If the unit were stolen though -- I'd buy another for sure.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $115.00
Submitted 10/02/2004 at 10:39pm by shad
Email: pickin4jesus at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
this is a really straight forward pedal. on the overdrive side, you've got controls for drive, tone and volume. the compressor side has controls for sustain, tone and gain. mine is a brand new 04 model which is upgraded with a heavier duth housing and and new tone on / off switch for the compression side. overdrive side features a bass boost switch. the nice thing is how quick you can dial in a usable tone. not a ton of tweeking to find a sweet spot.

Sound Quality : 9
i'm palying a 72 reissue thinline telecaster with humbuckers into a peavey classic 2x12 tweed combo. the amp it's self has a decent distortion channel, but i could never really adjust it to give me a nice overdrive without sounding thin and fuzzy. so my search was on for a quality overdrive since i don't have ocassion to need anything too heavy for my sound. this overdrive is really nice for giving your rhythm work a nice bite without saturating the chords / notes to the point of sounding fuzzy or distorted. basically the sound of a good tube amp starting to break up at high volume. it can actually produce a fair amount of borderline distortion if you really crank the drive cotrol, but then you're dealing with a bit of fuzz which i don't really dig. to my ears, setting the drive anywhere from 10 o'clock to 2 o'clock will produce a huge range of usable gain. the tone control on the overdrive side will produce quite a bit of coloration to your guitar tone. it takes a bit of tweeking, but you're sure to find a variety of really great and usable tone setting. the bass boost is always on on my pedal. it adds i really nice low end presence without adding distortion. on to the compressor... it's really an awesome clean boost as well as a steller compressor! you can get a huge signal boost without a hint of distortion adding presence and sustain to clean solo passages. used with the overdrive, it will give a nice volume boost for solos and push the overdrive just over the edge, adding a bit more grit and sustain for some blues rock soloing. the tone on / off for the compression side is a nice touch. i leave it off all the time.

Reliability : 10
i've only had mine a short time, but they are made with really heavy duty housings. i can't see this pedal ever falling apart unless heavily abused. it seems to be as tough or tougher than anything i've used before.

Customer Support : No Opinion
have had no dealings with visual sound, but from what i've read, they are a fine company set on building quality products.

Overall Rating : 9
i play a music that is a fusion of rock, blues, jazz, funk, latin, ect. a cross between phish, santana, srv and sting if you can imagine. i consider myself to be fairly knowledeable about good guitar tones after 15 years playing. as far as overdrives goes, i've used a reissue tube screamer, reverend drivetrain, danelectro daddy-o and overdrives from mxr. the closest competition of the overdrives i've used is the reverend drivetrain which also sounded really good. but, when you consider that you also get an awesome compressor to compliment your overdrive, there's really no contest. i also use the visual sound h2o chorus / echo which is really awesome. if someone stole mine or i lost it, i'm quite sure i'd buy another one. the only other pedal that interests me is the voodoo labs sparkle drive which i might check out. as far as versitile analog pedals go, this one can't be beat as far as bang for the buck. if you're shopping for overdrives, don't hesitate to put this one on your list of "must try" pedals.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $99
Submitted 09/08/2004 at 04:23am by Uncle E
Email: uncle<dot>e at jrrshop<dot>com

Ease of Use : 7
Easier to get good tones out of than a TS9 thanks to the bass boost. I'm only giving it a 7 because, though the pedal is easy to make sound good, there are plenty of bad sounds available, too. Higher scores should be saved for pedals that sound good no matter how you set them. After all, how much easier to use can you get than that?

Sound Quality : 6
The TS9 side is brilliant. I honestly see no reason to hang on to my modded TS9 now that I have the Visual Sound pedals (I've got their J&H pedal, as well) & the bass boost opens up a whole new range that should be available on a Tube Screamer but isn't.

The compressor is a big let down, unfortunately. I've never owned a vintage Ross but if those things sound this noisy & color the sound this much then I really don't ever want to own one. It's a shame, too, because the actual compression is extremely smooth & has a great release.

Reliability : No Opinion

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
After all the negative things I said about this pedal, I actually would buy another one (or a J&H) if something happened to this one simply because it's the cheapest & perhaps best way I know of to get a vintage TS9 tone. Love it or hate it, the TS9 has permanently left its mark & anyone that plays sessions or cover gigs had better have that sound available in their toolbox. Since HC describes a 10 rating as being a "fantastic value", I've not choice but to rate it a 10.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $99
Submitted 09/06/2004 at 07:12pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
Pretty easy to use... 3 knobs and 1 switch for each effect... comes with a booklet if you need settings to rip off someone elses tone.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using this with a Les Paul and a Tele running into a Twin and a Deluxe... OD is great, very versitale, with lower gain, gives a nice tube amp breakup sound, can get moderate rock tone. I use the compressor mainly for clean boost, does a great job giving me fat lead tone. I'm not interested in getting anybody elses tone, I got this to help out my own... I love it.

Reliability : No Opinion
No idea yet... had it about a month, nothing bad yet.

Customer Support : No Opinion
No clue.

Overall Rating : 10
I play my own brand of blues, I find it to be excellent, you could probably nail Stevie's tone, with the OD being a pretty close replica of a TS808, but again, to yound players... find your own tone, unless you want to be a tribute band.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: 75 (#) used
Submitted 08/27/2004 at 09:10am by otto parts

Ease of Use : 9
easy, although the micro switch bass boost for the overdrive is placed over on the compressor side of the pedal for some strange reason (the newer model has it over on the od side now and a new switch on the righthand side that bypasses the tone knob for the compressor)

Sound Quality : 7
at first i didn't like it that much, i just wanted an od pedal and i happened to see this one in a local secondhand shop one lunchtime. the od reminds me of american beer commercial jingles (i should've taken a hint from the name of the pedal -"route 66 american overdrive"!) but it's grown on me over the past 2 years. the od is smooth and compressed (so much so that having both od and comp on simultaneously is too ott for me), not enough gain for thrash metal of course but is enough for an 80's hair rock simulator. i don't use the comp that much, only now and then, mainly with chorus for that cheesey 80's clean sound with sustain set at 11 oclock so it's not too hissy. the comp is loud btw, even with vol set at 12 o'clock there is a boost - totally the opposite of of my old 80's boss cs-2 which causes your volume to drop out when you switch it on. but i'd rather the comp had an attack knob instead of a tone knob (like the cs-2) - i just don't use the tone knob because i don't want it muffled and i don't want it hissy.

Reliability : 7
build quality is just ok. seems decent enough. made in taiwan - so not as 'boutique' as it looks. folded metal like electroharmonix use so beer could spill in the gaps at the edges. naff and loose battery cover on the base for more beer to seep into. big rubber feet (need to cut these down if velcrowing to a pedal board). battery leads are flimsy like on most pedals so need to take care when changing batts. hasn't broken down so yes i'd say it's reliable.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never dealt with.

Overall Rating : 7
so so. its only a transistor pedal od not a tube amp so what did i expect?!. better sounding (from memory) than my old boss od that i sold years ago back in '94. my stating the obvious advice for you is:- don't buy blind based on reviews. try it in a shop and make your own mind up. it's a bit overpriced for what it is i think. new they cost #130! for home playing volumes this isn't a bad od pedal. not bad at all, and you get a good compressor to boot.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $68 used
Submitted 07/21/2004 at 08:10pm by p s
Email: nodrugtestingever at yahoo<dot>com

Ease of Use : 8
Simple to use. Dial in moderate settings, adjust from there (it's compression/overdrive, not too complicated...)

Manual is helpful, if a little redundant. It was very good at making me feel real happy with my purchase, however.

My unit is exactly the same as the one pictured as of 6/21/04. I understand Visual Sound has produced a different model with a newer external switch for the Bass Boost and another switch on the Drive side, I am not aware of its function, though.

Sound Quality : 9
Stratocaster -> Fender Ultra Chorus Amplifier

Rt. 66 -> Digitech PDS 1000 Digital Delay on FX Loop

This unit is pretty damn quiet for an OD/Compression pedal, unless you turn the SUSTAIN way up. (Running it through the FX Loop probably has something to do with that, it cuts alot of hiss and hum)

This thing is by no means whatsoever weak. The Drive channel on the amplifier is fairly weak as gain peaks out. However, with the Rt. 66 I now have oodles and oodles of Gain and Drive AND TONE to fiddle with. For one pedal, I can generate far FAR more sounds than any digital multi FX processor for roughly the same retail price ($135). The sound is genuine, and lives up to Visual Sound's claims that it is indeed an exact copy of a Tubescreamer. I have A/B'd it and this is not totally true; a Tubescreamer is a Tubescreamer, and it will, of course, sound great... However, this thing, combined with the compression sounds better to me. The drive on its own is okay, but with the compression it is all kinds of godly.

I love Mike Einziger's work. This pedal will add alot of headroom to your sound, every time I have desired more drive/gain/tone I am amazed at how low I have these controls set, and how much more room I have to produce a new sound. I have yet to need a sound that has peaked this pedal out.

Reliability : 9
Built like a tank.

I would never NOT use this pedal.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never dealt with 'em...

Check out the website though, customer service doesn't seem too far out of reach.

Overall Rating : 9
For what it is limited to, this pedal really does a lot. A new sound can be had with every little twist of each nob, which is something I can really appreciate, because I can't really afford to buy boutique pedals to produce only a couple of new sounds.

Very, very nice pedal.

An excellent addition to anyone's board for not a lot of money.

I expect all of Visual Sound's pedals to soon become very, very popular.

If you have a Boss or DOD type drive/distortion pedal, A/B the cost and the sound with this thing, I can almost guarantee you'll be wishing your money had been better spent.



Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $67 used
Submitted 04/20/2004 at 11:08am by Clay

Ease of Use : 9
Two effects in one. Overdrive and compression. Kudos for having a separate tone control for each effect. The overdrive also has an overdrive control and volume. The compressor (besides tone knob) has sustain and a gain knob. Ther is also a bass boost switch (which I keep on) for the overdrive. With my amp it helps, but that's just my rig.

The Route 66 really does allow you to plug-and-play with each effect. Within a minute you'll have very usable tones for either effect. When I have the overdrive kicked in (or the fuzzfoot from Captain Coconut 2 tuned on) I use the compressor as a lead boost. When I play clean passages I keep the compressor kicked on all the time and just turn the volume on my guitar down. A cool thing playing clean with the compressor is with my Route 66 compressor gain at about 1:00 I can roll the guitar volume up to get a slight break up in my amp and get some great tones (think of 'Lights' by Journey or 'Lenny' by SRV)

The reason I gave the Route 66 a 9 instead of 10 are for two reasons: #1: the flat settings are at 9:00 instead of 12:00 (minor gripe); #2: When I kick the compressor on for leads with the Route 66 overdirve on, the voulme does not seam as loud as when I kick it on with the CC2 FuzzFoot or just my amps clean channel. This also might mean I need to woodshed more with my stuff.

As for a manual, I got this unit used so no manual. But you don't need it.

Sound Quality : 9
Tone. Isn't it all about tone.

With that said, you'll be happiest using this with a tube amp.

The Route 66 overdrive channel is said to be based upon Ibanez's original TS808. Never played through one personally so I cannot give a true A/B comparrison. With that said, the Route 66 overdrive is a very good sound. Going into my tube amp, it sounds very organic and warm. The tone knob allows a great deal of flexibility. With my Les Paul plugged in, and some knob twistin', I could get some early ZZ Top and UFO tones (LeGrange, I'm Bad-I'm Nationwide, Too Hot to Handle etc.) With my Strat Plus with Lace Sensors I was getting some pretty good SRV, Chris Duarte' type toneage. Again just playing with the tone knob. For once there is an effects unit where the tone knob does NOT screw up your tone.

The compressor, well let me put it this way....I WISH THERE WERE TWO OF THEM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I would leave one all the time with the gain around 1:00 and and a slight compression and the other for lead boost. This S.O.B souds delicious and is relatively quiet considering what it does. You can dial i enough pre-amp gain to push you amp into overdrive while on cranked on the clean channel.

I have an original MXR Dyna-Comp and a reissue Dyna-Comp. Both are very noisy compared to the Route 66 compressor. I have to give Visual Sounds credit, they built a compressor that made me yank my Dyna-Comp off my pedal board.

Heres an idea for VS. Build a uniti with two of these compressors in it. I'd buy it in a second.

There are the tone Pros, now the Cons: if you are running the Route 66 overdrive pretty dirty and use the compressor as lead boost, it will get kind of noisy. Part of it is the nature of a compressor, the other part is that with the compressor adding in pre-amp gain along with volume boost and then overdrive, well...it's a recipe for noise.

Also, for those of you looking for Hi-gain, metal machine boxes, this ain't it. You won't be able to scoop your mids or get the soft fuzzy type of distortion. This critter's overdrive tone can best be described as "PRE-big-hair/cucummber-in-my-spandex-80's" tone. If you'r looking for a Warrant/Poison/Ratt tone, look elsewhere.

My rig set-up is starting to finalize (again) thanks to this pedal(s). My main axes are: 89' or 91' Fender Strat Plus with Lace Sensors, 99' Gibson Les Paul Standard, 82' Gibson E/2 Explorer and a 97' Epiphone EDS-1275 Jimmy Page model double-neck. These go into a 535Q CryBaby>Route 66>FoxRox Captain Coconut 2 into a Peavy Classic 50 2-12 combo tube amp. FX loop runs a Boss BF-2 flanger> DOD 690 chorus from around 1979> Line6 DL-4 delay.

Reliability : 9
I've only had it for about a month but it seems very sturdy even heavy. The knobs feel very smooth but solid like they could take some abuse.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Have not had to deal with them

Overall Rating : 9
I have been playing for over 20 years and have used tons of different gear. Many of which in moments of stupidity, I traded or sold. The hardest tone I've have ever tried to get is a good overdrive with a stompbox. This pedal goes a long way.

In the bands I've played, we always played some originals along with ZZ Top, SRV, Bonnie Raitt, A.R.C. Angel, STP, Mellisa Ethridge and other classic tunes.

This pedal is living up to what Visual Sounds website and the other people that have written reviews here claim. And what's best, I've got mine for a steal at $67!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $119
Submitted 04/13/2004 at 10:55pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
Incredibly easy to get a good sound out of it. But I have found that what generally works for others, doesn't always apply to me. So, while I say the pedal sounds great, your own interactions with this pedal may lead you to a different conclusion.

Sound Quality : 9
Runnning a variety of Tele's and Strats through this, into a Vibrolux Reverb, Pro Jr.

This unit is not terribly noisey.

The effects are as present as you want them. The voicing of this pedal leans towards a warmer, browner sound if you will. This is part of the reason I believe this pedal is a good match for me. My technique seems to wrestle sqauwks and glinks out of my guitars, and this pedal does a nice job of filter my peaky tones out of the mix.

I place this pedal in front of my Ibanez AD-80, hit the compressor and drive, break out the slide and go to town!

Reliability : No Opinion
Ask me in twenty years. I have an MXR flanger that I've had for twenty five years that is pissing me off these days.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion
If a very thick and compressed sound is what your after, this pedal warrants further research. It will not provide a high gain, saturated sound. With the compressor on and the drive set to modest levels, many players will find they have ample sustain. Even with modest drive levels set, the guitar retains a degree of clarity, letting the personality of the guitar shine through. Very intriguing qualities.

So many distortion pedals hijack the guitars signal and impose their paradigm on the sound, that it is refreshing to hear a pedal that knows where to draw the line. Anyone of moderate ability will recognize this as a virtue.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $119
Submitted 03/03/2004 at 08:26pm by mark

Ease of Use : 10
it has knobs, turn them till it sounds good.

Sound Quality : 9
if you want a transparent OD that won't color your tone then this is a great pedal. the compressor sounds great for a lead boost and sustain but IMO makes everything sound a tad muddy. if you want the best OD ever than buy an old Ibanez PUE5 Tube. (its a pedal board with a built in 12ax7 tube) nothing sounds warmer than the tube screamer on this board.. wish I could find the same TS with out having to spend $400 for the stupid board. (which has a delay and chorus that I don't need)

Reliability : 10
had for one year. seems rock solid

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 9
DO NOT EVER BUY A Ibanez TS9 RE-ISSUE. This pedal blows it out of the water.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $130
Submitted 01/26/2004 at 07:07pm by Chris

Ease of Use : 10
Very simple - an OD and compression pedal in one. The instructions had examples that do a good job of showing off it's capabilities.

Sound Quality : 9
I've tried out a lot of OD pedals, trying to find one that could push my amp's (Carvin X-100b) distortion over the top with really high gain & sustain, but still maintain the amp's basic character, and this pedal nails it. The Boss SD-1 and Tubescreamer are pretty good, but you lose some of the bass response, which the Route 66 fixes with the bass boost switch. Also, with the compressor side, I can get a louder volume boost for soloing than with just an OD pedal, AND more sustain than I could ever want.

I play a Carvin DC127T and a Michael Kelly Vibe HT (ES135 knockoff), both with humbuckers. I play and like just about any style of music, from clean to metal, but use this for the harder stuff.

It's OK for adding dirt on the clean channel, but I prefer the lower gain settings straight from my amp. However, I did try this pedal on a friend's Fender Hot Rod Deluxe clean channel, and it sounded great, very organic.

The pedal only has a little noise with the compression on, which is what any compressor will do unless you have a noise gate.

Reliability : No Opinion
I've only had this for a couple months, so it's too early to say. Seems rugged enough and haven't had any problems so far.

Customer Support : 10
I've gotten friendly, quick e-mails responses from them both before and after I bought it.

Overall Rating : 10
I'm really happy with this pedal. The one thing my amp couldn't do is provide a real over the top distortion with lots of sustain and this pedal gets it there. If it were stolen or lost I'd probably get it again. If I only wanted something to add dirt to my clean channel, I wouldn't have rated it quite as high, but that's not why I got it.

My only wish is that the compressor had an attack knob, so the dynamics would be smoother when you initially hit the strings with the sustain cranked way up. Another minor complaint is the styling. The logo & fonts just scream "FOR COUNTRY MUSIC ONLY".


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $100.00
Submitted 01/11/2004 at 10:26pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
This pedal is really easy to use.

Sound Quality : 9
I played a strat --> Vox V847 Wah --> Visual Sound Route 66 Overdrive & Compressor --> Fender Hot Rod Deluxe. I play a lot early U2 stuff (War, Boy) as well some punk/alternative stuff (Weezer, Greenday). I hope that gives you an idea of the sound I'm aiming for.

This pedal is a great deal, you get two great sounding pedals for the price of one. First the overdrive:

I give the overdrive an 8 because it sounds great, it does a real accurate job of producing that great soft american overdrive tone. The bass boost is also a great feature when you need that extra bottom end. This pedal does a decent job of emulating those early U2 tones but this pedal is not a distortion monster. When I play Weezer or Greenday stuff, I use this pedal with my amp's overdrive channel. But if you're looking for a great sounding American overdrive tone, this is a great pedal. Also, this pedal hits the softer overdrive tone that the Strokes use perfectly. But if you want to sound like the Strokes then get the Jekyl and Hyde pedal.

As for the compressor: I also really thought it sounded good. It did a great job of giving me that extra clean sound for those U2 songs. As for a general compressor I give it an 8. The compressor has a wide range in the attack and sustain area.

I highly recommend this pedal if you're looking a great soft sounding overdrive (not metal) and a great compressor.

Reliability : 10
Owned it for 2 years now and has not failed me once.

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

Overall Rating : 9
Overall this pedal is great sounding. It's overdrive sounds great (but not for Metal or sounds that need a lot of distortion) and the compressor does it's job of leveling out your string volume and attack.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $125
Submitted 01/03/2004 at 02:57pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
It's a distortion pedal which is easy. The compression was pretty easy too, but it was hard to hear what the "sustain" knob did. Came with a few sample setups that were nice sounding.

Sound Quality : 7
When the overdrive and compression are turned on together and the sustain is turned past 12o'clock the pedal gets quite noisy, a hum that does not go away.
I had 2 gripes about the sound.
1) It sounded as if the overdrive was muffled. It had an incomplete, thin sound to it. Almost like the volume was on too quietly, so I turned it up, but still a very thin sound. Missing mid-range I say.
2) The sound had a sag to it (which I guess it is supposed to have). If you hit the strings, then let them ring out, you here some sag right after you hit it. The tone kind of goes from bright to normal with every pick of the string. This made it have a very happy sound (similiar to the band "Jet") This just did not work for me.
I run a G&L SC-3 into a '84 MesaBoogie Mark II B+

Reliability : No Opinion
steel casing seemed thick. It was a suprisingly light pedal for the size of it.

Customer Support : No Opinion
It was hard to find a dealer, the company did not post dealers on the net

Overall Rating : 7
I just did not like the tone of the pedal. I felt that something was taken out of the tone through the pedal(when it's turned on) I like a much thicker sound, this was not beefy. The only other thing was that the sag in the pedal was not my style. It sounded like it took a split second for it to gather its thoughts and send out a sound
In my search for this pedal I tried nearly 20 overdrive and similiar pedals. I found that the Fulltone Full-Drive2 was the best. Other pedals to check out- Electro Harmonix Big Muff, Voodoo Lab SparkleDrive, and the phat Fulltone Full-Drive2


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $70 used
Submitted 11/10/2003 at 03:50am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy to use if you know what you are doing....

Sound Quality : 10
this is the best compressor I have ever used and I have used them all.Very musical sounding w/ tons of gain.Really helps to get the best single coil clean sound you have ever heard (you will also need a good tele and a nice amp but this is another story...)
I leave it ALWAYS ON!
It also works great as a great low impedance buffer to clear up your sound if you use many pedals like me.
OD side sounds like a nice TS on steroids.

Reliability : 10
Built like a tank.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
the only gripe I have w/ this pedal is that it needs a battery to operate in a TOTALLY silent way.I have tried every addaptor I could get my hands on (including VS 1spot) and it always had a low hum .
But a 9v duracell lasts 2 months in this baby so it will do...


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $129.99
Submitted 11/08/2003 at 07:29pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
Gain, tone, and volume for the overdrive side, sustain, tone and gain for the compression side. nothing you haven't seen before.

Sound Quality : 9
I use a fender 62 reissue strat (american), into the route 66, then into fender hot rod deluxe tube amp. Generally this pedal is pretty quiet. when the gain is all the way up it can get hissy, but no more than the average OD pedal. I like to use the comp side and the OD side together, and can get a really good SRV tone out of it. back off on the gain and you get a nice clean boost. This pedal also uses the JR blah-blah-blah chip that was used in the original TS808's, so you can get a tube screamer kind of sound out of it but without so much midrange, plus you can boost the bass. Even if you aren't a big Tube screamer fan you will like this pedal. Great tones right out of the box. when messing with the compressing and turning all levels to 9 or 10, I can even get a pretty convincing hendrix sound. Extremely versatile.

Reliability : 10
I havent' gigged with it yet, but it has a good heft and it looks like it's built like a tank. Very wide, so it won't tip over easily. switches are very sturdy.

Customer Support : 1
Haven't had to deal with them, but their website (Visualsound.net) is good, with sound samples.

Overall Rating : 9
I have been playing blues and classic rock for quite a while and I can tell you that this pedal suites my needs just fine. I use it with a strat and a tube amp, it sounds like god on the neck pickup. If lost or stolen I would definetly buy a new one. When I was shopping for it a compared it against tube screamers, keeley modded tube screamers, pedals with actual preamp tubes in them, even an old hotcake pedal. This one was by far the best and suited my needs perfectly. does everything. It's awesome that it has a built in compressor that you can use to compliment the OD. The only reason I gave it a nine was to leave room for that dream pedal that may or may not come along. This pedal is my absolute favorite, and it has a decent price.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $110
Submitted 11/03/2003 at 11:05am by Sean
Email: sgrexa<at>yahoo dot com

Ease of Use : 9
Easy to use if you have experience with compression and OD.

Sound Quality : 10
I play an '84 MIJ Squier tele with Fralin replacemnt pickups and a Raven RP-450 semi hollowbody PRS knock off with Fralin humbuckers into a custom made '65 Deluxe Reverb copy made by Sheldon Colin (point to point wired, orange caps, Weber speaker, blah, blah-simply killer!). It was a toss up between this pedal and the Pedalworx Texas Two Step. The price and the compressor flexibility sold me on this, never heard one before. When I first got it, I put my AnalogMan comprossor in front of the Rte. 66 (arguably the best compressor out there, Trey from Phish uses these). I was amazed at the sound of the Rte. 66 comp. Not only did it hold it's own, but I think it actually sounded a little looser and more musical. Now on to the OD. Wow! TS-808 heaven! I used to use the AnalogMan comp. in front of a vintage Ibanez SD-9 which is tone heaven with the tone and dist. settings set real low on the SD-9. I find that this Rte. 66 provides more flexibilty and ease of use and loses the nasal sizzle quality of the SD-9 when the setting are turned up. Basically it sounds better and the bass boost is nice too. You can go from great Texas blues to over the top sustain for days and everything in between. A really nice pedal at a great price.

Reliability : No Opinion
Seems solid, and haven't heard any negatives on this one.

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/A

Overall Rating : 10
I play mostly jam band stuff (Phish/Dead) and blues and the Rte. 66 shines on so many levels. Time to unload the SD-9 and Comprossor. They sound great, but this thing is better. Sounds better with single coils IMHO. Two great pedals in one. No sh*t.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $150
Submitted 06/11/2003 at 04:33pm by Corey
Email: inthisweb at hitmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
I replaced my Reverend Drivetrain with the Route 66 pedal, and I am amazed every time I use it. The O.D. alone is worth the cost of the pedal, but combining it with the compressor is SWEET!

Sound Quality : 10
I use a '62 Gibson S.G., a Dano tuner, a dano octave, the Boss V-wah, then the Route 66 into a Line 6 Delay. All this into a Peavey Classic 100 with a 115e cab. I can get those sweet Gilmore-esque sustaining notes, and I can get the Santana - Boogie sound as well.

Reliability : 10
I've only had the pedal 2 weeks, but I gig 2-3 times a week, and she's held up so far. No backup-

Customer Support : No Opinion
not yet.

Overall Rating : 10
I play alot of different atyles, from Reggae, blues, and funk, to classic rock, maybe a little hard stuff. I've been playing for 21 years, 15 of those years everyday 100%If this pedal was stolen, I'd buy 5 more.I love everything about this pedal, wouldn't change a thing. I've had a love affair with overdrive pedals the last year or so. Boss turbo O.D., Marshall Bluesbreaker,Jekyll&Hyde, H&K tubeman, Reverend Drivetrain, and finally the Route 66. I chose this pedal for it's ease of use, Smart combination with the compressor/sustainer, and of course, the TONE!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $65 used
Submitted 05/12/2003 at 10:33am by corky newman
Email: jnewman<at>graphiccenter dot net

Ease of Use : 10
very easy to use, all the sounds sound good, the OD side is the ticket, and the compressor side is cool for solid chords.

Sound Quality : 8
I use this with a killer Demeter TGA amp & a Melancon Tele style guitar with stacked P-90's. IT gets a little noisy with both sides turned on, and a little tubby sounding also. The bypass does add alittle tone & volume to your amps sound, so if your amp sounds good, it will get more of the goodness out of it, but if your amp sounds just ok, well then it might sound bad. The thing i have been looking for is a solid overdrive better then my old trusty Boss super OD. and this pedal walks all over it. the OD is full, and rings with overtones & controled feedback, very cool. its not noisy by itself, so i use it without the compressor on. Just a killer overdrive pedal on its own, much better then most I have tryed...

Reliability : 10
looks like it built like a tank....

Customer Support : 7
don't know?..have heard great things....

Overall Rating : 10
Been playing for over 32 years, been looking for a killer OD pedal forever. I have had, vintage tubescreamers, Klon, all the wantabee's tube screames, Boss OD-1, super OD, turbo OD, OD3, and the Blues pedal. Sparkle drive, fluid drive II, Dan electro's, and all the tube in the pedal types..this pedal sounds better to me then all of them..much more musical type of OD....


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $110
Submitted 03/25/2003 at 12:39pm by Cliff

Ease of Use : 7
It's a versatile pedal as it's two discrete effects, so it takes some time blending the two to find out what you can do. Each effect on its own is pretty straight forward. I would say it's not a quick-out-of-the-box-you-can-use-it effect, as it seems to work best with a moderate compression setting blending with the overdrive, and it takes some attentive listening to finesse it.

Sound Quality : 8
Both the overdrive and the compressor sound good. There is a lot of gain from both sides, and stacking the two using gain can get generate a lot of noise, but to a large degree that's the nature of the beast with overdrive and compression. Personally, I prefer to have the noise than to gate it, and I think this pedal works best at lower gain settings, so it's not really an issue for me. I can see that using this with a noisy rig or in a noisy setting could exaggerate one's noise-to-signal level, and in some situations one may want to incorporate a noise gate. I play Strats and Teles through Rivera amps, so there is noise, but I use moderate gain from the pedal and get most of my overdrive from my amp, so I can live with this pedal.

I think the overdrive sounds pretty good, but it doesn't have the tonal richness and textural dynamics and depth (sorry for using such abstract and subjective language, but that the best I can describe it as) as my last over drive pedal, the Menatone Red Snapper. However, the Rt. 66 overdrive sounds good, and I think it sounds like a Tube Screamer. The bass boost switch is nice and it adds some more depth to the tone. Before I got this pedal I had a Visual Sound Jekyll & Hyde overdrive, but I exchanged it as I just didn't need all of the gain that the J&H provides, and I didn't have a compressor. I'm glad I traded the J&H for the Rt. 66, as the clean boost and added oomph from the compressor is nice. The Tube Screamer side of the Rt. 66 is voiced differently (it seems to me) than the Tube Screamer side of the J&H. On the Rt. 66 it has more drive and it distorts more, but there is less initial clean boost before the distortion kicks in (in fact, on the Rt. 66 there is no room for a clean boost with the Tube Screamer side, whereas on the J&H there is less gain and some initial clean boost with the Tube Screamer side). This is a good thing, for both pedals, as with the J&H one can get a clean boost on the TS side, and use the Hyde side for a heavier compressed distortion, and with the Rt. 66 any clean boost one might want will come from the compressor, and this works better as a clean boost than one would get with an overdrive. The TS side of the Rt. 66 has more gain than the TS side of the J&H, and it seems to be a bit in between the two sides of the J&H. I think that the way the two pedals work shows a well thought out design, as you can get good clean and a wide range of OD and distortion from either pedal.

The compressor sounds nice: it adds some sparkle and fatness at moderate settings, and the tone control works well--no muddying or shrilling of the guitar's tone. It will squish and pump the signal, but it's not as radical as some may like. My old Boss CS-1 was more extreme...it was like squeezing the sound out of a toothpaste tube: very radical and industrial havocy. This compressor is more tame and traditional, good for clean Nashville picking, but I best like it as a clean boost with some treble dialed in and a little compression...it adds some nice balls and presence to the tone. There is a lot of gain available from the compressor, it gets very loud, but with the volume comes the elevated noise floor, so this may be useful, but may be unusable for some.

I think the best tones from the pedal come from running the compressor with a slight boost and compression in to the overdrive with light (10 o'clock) drive: this really helps the tone and character of the overdrive, it seems to wake it up nicely and makes a good useful boost. Neither the overdrive or the compressor are tonally transparent: the overdrive has some mid-coloration (like a TS), and the compressor adds some lows and upper-mids.

The pedal has a buffered bypass. I don't think there's anything wrong with buffered bypass, and it's good to have a buffer in your signal chain if you're driving a lot of wire and pedals. I've had tru-bypass pedal that have noisy and poppy switches, so tru-bypass is no

Reliability : No Opinion
I haven't had the pedal long enough to subject it to rough use, but it seems all right. The enclosure is a nice heavy gage steel, but it's a bent sheet metal design (similar to the Electro-Harmonix enclosures) so there are slight gaps where the folds meet , and I suppose it's not going to be as impervious to the elements as a Hammond enclosure, but I don't know how this would be a practical concern unless one where playing in a very dusty environment. The build quality and design seem good, but this a factory made pedal from Taiwan, not a hand-built small production pedal with the build aesthetics of a true boutique pedal (point-to-point wiring on perf board, etc.). The components are not visible as the PCB is the full size of the enclosure (you can only see the solder side). The jacks and pots are attached to the enclosure, but the footswitches are soldered directly to the PCB. I guess this makes for an easy way to anchor the PCB, but I suppose if a footswitch was ever to come loose it could strain the PCB (I'll check my switches periodically). The battery sits in a slot in a middle of the PCB. The battery cover is a flexible piece of plastic that one bends up and slides out of the way to get to the battery. This seems like an afterthought in design, and makes for more bulky relief on the bottom of the pedal which is a hassle if you're going to put Velcro on the bottom for a pedal board. All-in-all, it seems solid enough to me, it feels solid. I see the factory build method and design as a cross between Electro-Harmonix pedals and Boss pedals....solid enough, and I'm sure it makes the pedal more affordable than being point-to-point handwired (see Menatone for this style).

Customer Support : No Opinion
I've never needed it, but I've heard good thing about the service. People have good things to say about Bob Weil, and he presents himself as a guitar-playing-regular-guy. He's from Tennessee, and there's a bit of a southern Christian thing going on his website, but it's his website and that don't bother me (I know it turns some people off), but hopefully he's an honest Christian and he'll follow the commandment of: "thou shall not burn thy customer; thy shall stand behind thy product." :) I did send them a few e-mail with questions about the J&H, and never got a reply, but he's gotten enough praise here for his service that I'm not worried about it.

Overall Rating : 8
It's a good sounding versatile and useful pedal. It will fatten your sound and do good overdrive distortion, clean boost, and compression, or combinations of these effects. It's not a high-end boutique hand built p-t-p wired pedal, but it sounds very good, it is well designed and thought out, it's very useful, and it's very affordable, especially when you consider that it's a pair of well match discrete effects. The pedal looks real cool, too.
Personally, I'd like the tonal character and the by-pass to be more transparent, but I'm not bothered the tone of the pedal. I've been playing over twenty years, and I think I've got good ears for tone, and I like this pedal. I use Rivera amps and Fender guitars, got a Teese wah (the best wahs, IMO), and misc. digital gear from DeltaLab and Yamaha for effects, also a great old Gibson amp that sounds weirder than a Zvex pedal. I play in a funk/reggae band, but I play a lot of roots and blues rock and roll, also some pedal steel guitar with roots and honky-tonk. The thing I like best about the pedal is the boost--with or without overdrive, and the fatness it adds. I would replace it if I lost it, especially at this price. I think it's up there with the boutique pedals, and while it doesn't have the build aesthetics that some people like to pay big bucks for, the sound is ver good. At this point I wouldn't worry about a back-up for this pedal.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $80 used
Submitted 01/19/2003 at 11:16am by Kenny Perciavalle
Email: kennyp at usaor<dot>net

Ease of Use : 8
Dialin in a good sound is easy. The only thing I noticed is that the tone control really changes quickly when you go fully clockwise so the final amount of the turn contains the most tone changes. Not a smooth taper pot.

Sound Quality : 8
Use a variety of guitars and amps. Fender Deluxe, Studiomaster ValveLeadmaster with LP's, strat, 335, Heritage 535, tele, etc... The compressor is okay but not as good as my smooth, original MXR Dynacomp. I love that pedal. The overdrive is smooth and let's the guitar tone come thru. Not for metal but good for R&R.

Reliability : 8
Seem solid.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never needed support but have sent a couple of emails and found them to be very responsive.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
Play various styles of music. Been playing over 40 years. Own lots of gear. Used to own lots of other gear. Had all the good stuff everybody wants now. BF Super Reverb, BF Twin, tube echoplex, Marshall SuperLead 100, 65 strat, gold top Les Paul, etc.....This pedal is easy to use, sounds good and is not unreasonably priced. It just does the job.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $100
Submitted 12/12/2002 at 01:35pm by Cary

Ease of Use : No Opinion
This is an update of my previous review. There is one really cool thing this pedal does that no other pedal will do. Will explain below.

Sound Quality : 10
You can use this pedal to get a 3 channel amp effect from a single channel amp. Here's how this works, using my Bassman reissue as an example: 1- Dial amp to find "sweet spot", where gain is regulated by pick attack. 2- Set compressor to clean up the tone and get a little more sustain. 3- Set OD for a boost with a little edge. 4- When you need a distorted sound, use the OD. When you need a clean sound, use the compressor. When you need a solo boost, stomp both switches at once. This is the coolest thing since toasted bagels with cream cheese. For this feature alone, this pedal goes to 11 on the 1-10 scale.

Reliability : 10
My earlier review mentions the killer reliability of this pedal. It is everything you could expect from a bank safe, but is cheaper and more fun.

Customer Support : 10
Bob Weil has the mojo, but is not a mofo.

Overall Rating : 10
Ideally, I play straight up rock'n'roll with no frills, but I have to play blues, r'n'b, and anything else I can fake to make ends meet. This pedal is always in use. I bought a backup, just in case, but haven't needed it yet.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 10/29/2002 at 06:51am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 9
Start with the knobs at 12 o'clock and tweak them 'til you like your tone -- how difficult could that be...

Sound Quality : 9
Wat tha hell man. I kant evun gett a gud corn ton frum dis peddle... Just kidding. I have borrowed one of these a few times and may just go out and buy one soon. It's a good sounding unit and well worth the price. Some complain of the noise -- here's the deal: Put ANY compressor in front of ANY overdrive, turn the knobs all the way up, and... you'll get a ton of noise. The trick is that the pedal has... you guessed it... KNOBS on it!!! And one can turn these KNOBS to get a long sustaining, lush tone with nice attack and minimal noise -- only takes a little bit of brain-power...

Reliability : No Opinion
I have only borrowed one of these to check it out. Seems that everyone else is having no problems.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
Overall, a good product. I have so much equipment that I am not sure I need one of these, but if I come across one and the price is right, I'd probably pick one up. Good value as well. If VS goes under or discontinues this model, I am certain the price for one of these will sky-rocket.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $100
Submitted 10/15/2002 at 06:15pm by Cary

Ease of Use : 7
Would be better if it had bigger knobs you could adjust with your feet. Otherwise, it's great.

Sound Quality : 7
Don't use the compressor with single coils, especially if you play on a stage where the lights are on the same circuit as the stage power. This is absolute hell. If you do this, get a noise gate, otherwise the 60 cycle hum will be amplified to the point where you will be forced to assault nearby innocents. The sounds themselves are wonderful.

Reliability : 8
This pedal had a full pint of beer dumped directly in it during last Mardi Gras, and it worked fine the next day. Probably 5 or 6 drunken fat chicks have fallen smack on top of this pedal without incident. It's pretty cool.

Customer Support : 9
Bob Weil seems like a pretty straight up guy, and the company seems to care alot about the individual client. This is great.

Overall Rating : 8
Other than the noise, I think this thing is the cat's ass.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $125
Submitted 10/08/2002 at 05:02am by Kevien

Ease of Use : 10

Sound Quality : 10

Reliability : 10

Customer Support : 10

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I've been playing for 6 years, I play classic rock, and jam music. (Hendrix, SRV, Dire Straits, Zep, Phish, Dead, etc) This overdrive is what i was looking for, nice thick and smooth, just the right ammount. And the compression is amazing. I can't reiterate enough how versatile this pedal can be.
I've played several other pedals both compression and OD, and other combinations. (Danelctro Daddy-o, 70's MXR Vintage Dynacomp, Tech 21 comptortion) This pedal blows them all away. The Daddy-o was nice, but not nearly as smooth as this, a little bit rougher around the edges (which is sometimes desierable.) The Comptortion was the only other pedal that i know of that is trying to combine distortion and compression, it didn't have independent switches, and it got noisier the more compression you added.
If it were stolen I'd get another, without a doubt.
The one thing I liked more about other OD pedals was separate EQ knobs (i.e. treble, bass, mid) but the one tone knob can dial in exactly what you're looking for on this pedal.
This is the best pedal for the money, it combines two effects, and does a great job of keeping them independent of each other, and at the same time offers great possibilities when they're combined.



Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $99 i think
Submitted 09/01/2002 at 05:44pm by brian

Ease of Use : 8
i didn't like the settings in the manual, but adjustment is not too hard if you've used an overdrive before, and you know what you are looking for tone-wise. compressor is slightly tougher, but i've never had one previously and i don't use it much, so difficulties there probably lie with the user, me!

Sound Quality : 9
good od sound. maybe a little too much gain for my taste, but by no means are there any really heavy dist. sounds in there. bass boost works well on "thin" bridge pickups. as for those that say there are no clean/edge of od sounds here, i disagree, they are very low on the gain knob, but i usually can get them, in fact that's mostly what i use this pedal for. comp. is nice, i just don't use it for much other than a lead boost when using od. there's some nice sounds when mixing the two if one pays attention to matching up the separate eq settings. i like a top-heavy od setting with a mid-heavy comp. setting and the bass boost, seems to give the best overall clarity when using the two together. the comp. alone is interesting, mostly just not my cup of tea. however, the few times i have used it i've been suprised at the country lead sounds available with single coils. one qualifier: you MUST use a regulated power supply or the comp. will be noisy. i run this with the following: gib. blueshawk,strat(tex. spec. pu's), hamer (sym. dunc. 59's) and an epi 335. seems to be friendly with other pedals: maxon phaser, eh polychorus. running into del. rev. reissue,peavey delta blues, sovtek mig 50. i really don't notice a big effect on bypassed tone, even though it is not true bypass. maybe a little chimey, if that makes since, but i'm pretty picky about that issue (i've had some bad expereinces with pedals that sound great when on, and like crap when bypassed) and this is the only non true bypass pedal i use regularly so i really can't complain.

Reliability : No Opinion
so far so good, only had this 9 mos. or so

Customer Support : No Opinion
no experience here. i own this and the 1-spot, both were purchased from retail dist. and i've had no prob. with either, i hope i never do.

Overall Rating : 9
this ended my search for an od pedal. i played it directly against the jek. & hyde, i thought this sounded better than jekyl and i didn't like hyde much at all. wanted to try a fulldrive, couldn't find one locally, have a jamming partner with maxon 808 and voodoo labs sparkle drive. i've played with 808 a little, and i like this one better from very limited experience, haven't tinkered with sparkle dr. yet, but it seems to sound pretty similar. i would replace it or get the sprkle drive if lost/stolen. been playing 6-7 yrs. mostly blues/rock/alternative? or whatever seems fun at the moment. used with a variety of tube amp/speaker combinations and multiple pickup types and guitars. good all around od, maybe not the best, but it's higher quality than my playing so it works for me!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 08/20/2002 at 07:18pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : No Opinion
I almost bought this after a home and band practice check but there are a few shortcomings not mentioned yet.
Good concept, easy to use, but not all combinations yield good results--of course.

Sound Quality : No Opinion
Note:
-VS's pure bypass seems to add a bit of top-end sheen
-the comp section EQ is quite toppy or muddy, no neutral setting
-the distortion is very good BUT it will not do an almost clean on the edge sound-too much gain- maybe also not enough gain with bite for tapper types
-bass boost is almost too much but usable

Reliability : No Opinion
-does need a regulated PS per VS instructions

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $117.99
Submitted 08/06/2002 at 08:19am by Jason Boggs
Email: jboggs at fbfs<dot>com

Ease of Use : 8
The manual they sent gave very "noisy settings". However I've owned numerous overdrives and figured this one out in a couple of days.

Sound Quality : 10
I own a Les Paul with Duncan 59s in both positions and I use a reissue Bassman and a reissue JTM 45 with an A/B box. I found the compressor channel to be very noisy when used by itself especially with the gain too high. Mostly I have been playing through the overdrive side which I have fell in love with. With the drive set straight up and the level cranked it pushes both my amps into creamy, smooth overdrive. The real fun comes in when you kick in the compressor to add to the drive. I found that using both pickups with the overdrive and compressor and guitar volume rolled back yielded some great BB King licks. This pedal also sounds great when used with a TS-9 set for a lead boost. Sounds much better than the Maxon 808 which made my tone weak and thin.

Reliability : No Opinion
Have only had it for 2 weeks.

Customer Support : 10
Very friendly, I sent them an email and they actually took the time to write back.

Overall Rating : 9
I play mostly blues or blues-rock and I find this pedal to be much better than many of its higher priced competitors (Maxon 808, Maxon 820, Fulltone, etc.) I've been playing for about 4 years now and I consider myself a bit of a tone snob, this definitely satisfies my tone jones. I would defintely get another if something happened to this one, I love how smooth the overdrive is with my amps. I thought the price should've been more like a Drivetrain though, considering Bob Weil helped make both, but for two pedals in one its a good value.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $120
Submitted 07/22/2002 at 01:25pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 7
It takes awhile to find the right sound.The manual doesn't give good sound examples,just experiment with it yourself.

Sound Quality : 9
I use a fender american tube series- blues junior,I also use my Gibson ES-135(TOTALLY worth the money!) with my R.66. I must say getting the volumes to match on both sides is frustrating.For example:You can have the compressor on and you have to turn the gain up to hear,now it's fine to combine with the overdrive as long as you don't have the sustain all the way up,but if you do, and you switch it on after you have your overdrive on, the volume jumps rediculously!You also have to hold your hand lightly on the strings to keep it from serious feedback.Now to the good: The sustain is incredible, i had a single note held for almost 25 sec. I love the distortion!It has a clean warm vintage sound,perfect for blues or classic rock!
This pedal is definately a keeper.Buy a seperate pedal with it if you
play slow leads, but for fast it's great!

Reliability : 10
It's very dependable,i can switch back and forth with sounds without delayed response. I use it's effects alone most of the time,(with a digital tuner) and i play in a youth group of about 150.Sometimes i use a delay with it.I use a fuzz effect on my zoom gfx707 when i need crunch.(by the way, the zoom is only good for the tuner in it and the fuzz and delay sorta,don't buy it!you will regret it.)If your battery is low one effect will go out before the other.

Customer Support : No Opinion
i haven't had to contact them yet, but their warranty is good.

Overall Rating : 9
I play a variety from classic rock,to bluesrock,southernrock,acoustic stuff too.I've been playing almost 3 years.I also own a zoomGFX707 and a dunlop wah, i regret both.If my Rt.66 was stolen or lost, i would get another one or buy a tubescreamer turbo dlx..I love the distortion,that's my favorite feature. I kinda like the compression.I love the sustain except when you have it up all the way,although it holds great the feedback and the volume jump are ridiculous,that gets on my nerves.I compared to the tubescreamer, pretty similar considering a copy of the TS-808 original is in the Rt.66.I chose it for the added sustain and warmth and clean distortion.I wish it had a feedback reducer and only one volume knob that would even the volume out.It helps me out with my songs i make up, because i can hear all my notes clean and clear and play contemporary christian rock(Third-Day and Audio A like sound),classic, and blues rock.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: 150 (Euros)
Submitted 06/19/2002 at 06:06pm by Mark Print

Ease of Use : 10
I got great tones out of this pedal after two minutes - all the controls do exactly what they say . It's a doddle to use .

Sound Quality : 9
Using this pedal with a Strat and Trace Elliot Velocette (same as Gibson Goldtone) amp I can get superb Hendrix, Chilli Peppers tones and even better country rock tones at bedroom volumes . When I turn it up, superb becomes awesome . The compressor is excellent on its own, far better than my Boss, with a shed load of gain if I want it . Combined with the overdrive it catches fire! For stinging chord work it beats any other unit I have tried . Surf,The Clash, Sparklehorse, it's all here . Downsides ? This is not a Death / Nu Metal pedal, so Slipknot or Raging Speedhorn types should look elsewhere, and it can get noisy with the drive and volume up, but seeing as I use single coils and listen to Sparklehorse what do I care ! Turn up the sustain and gain as well and feedback insanity ensues - great for Sonic Youth impressions . Also the overdrive is noticeably stronger with the bass boost on .These are minor faults (to me) when compared to the plus points of this pedal . When I run this into my Big Muff - Oh Lordy !!!

Reliability : 8
Looks bombproof. In fact it looks like a fall out shelter for cockroaches .

Customer Support : 8
Had a hell of a game trying to find one in the U.K. E-mailed Bob at Visual Sound and he got straight back to me with help . I eventually got one mail order from the German distributor Musik-Produktiv for 150 Euros (about 95 Quid) . Try www.musik-productiv.de . They were incredibly helpful and spoke perfect English, and even allowing for mail and currency charges were #30 cheaper than in England ! And it only took three days to arrive !

Overall Rating : 9
Its Just what I wanted from an overdrive pedal .If I lost it I would definately get another, but not at U.K. prices . #130 is a rip - off, but 150 euros is a bit of a bargain .


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: #59 (UK PoundsI`m)
Submitted 05/15/2002 at 12:31pm by Dinger
Email: dingerz at btopenworld<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
Lovely analogue OD and Compression.Stomp switch for each side.Manual switch for added bass on OD side(if you`ve got nimble feet you might be able to flick it on mid solo)

Sound Quality : 10
The OD is good,beeter than most not as good as some.It`s the compression side that holds an alladins cave of tone.Dial up a mild drive on your favourite valve amp(mines a Marshall JCM900).Wind all the controls up on the compressor and then stomp on it.Then bathe in sonic bliss.This thing is XXXXin` smokin`.Switch to your clean channel .Start playing some Bo Didley,the punch will make your clothes hurt.Wind the compression down a bit,back the pedal tone off a bit and you can make your Marshall sound like a Fender.(I only play single coils so I don`t know how it sounds with humbuckers).
The compression alone gets a 10.OD aswell!this pedal is a 10++.

Reliability : 8
Lets face it,nothing lasts forever.But it is fairly sturdy.The Battery sits in a gap in the circuit board wich seems a bit foolishly designed.Use the D.C.input(9v)and it may save snapping the circuit board.I never use any back up gear,and I would have confidence in the pedal.(see other reviews)

Customer Support : No Opinion
N/A

Overall Rating : 10
I`m a very typical guitarist.Over the years I`ve tried to assimilate all the great styles.Charlie Christian.Django,Jimi,Carlos,Nile Rogers, FZ,the Three Kings,the list is endless.I like effects,but ultimately they bore me and pale into insignificance compared to straight in your face guitar tone.Guitar,valve amp with reverb and one pedal.For me it`s a tele with a baseball bat neck.Marshall JCM900
50 watt dual reverb combo loaded with a celestion(as all marshalls are)and this pedal.If this pedal were stolen it wouldn`t be the end of the world but I would try to by another.Try plenty before you buy.
I also recommend the session Jerry donaghue pre amp(Monster mid scoop)
Marshall bluesbreaker pedal.Don`t waste your hard earned cash on some vintage piece of bullshit(E.g.Ibanez Tube Screamer).Good luck to all those looking for the final piece othe jigsaw for there perfect rig.
This pedal may well be it.Try it.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: see previous review
Submitted 04/20/2002 at 02:07am by j turnpike

Ease of Use : No Opinion
This is an update; see my Sep 2000 review.

Sound Quality : No Opinion
This is an update; see my Sep 2000 review.

Reliability : 10
Here's what I wanted to update. I've been playing this pedal hard for nearly two years now and am very impressed how well it has held up.

Most recently I was backing up Sally Taylor (daughter of James Taylor/Carly Simon) for five nights in, of all places, northern Thailand. The first two nights were at a very primitive outdoor place called Rasta Cafe, in conditions I'd say approximated setting up and playing at the beach, complete with plenty of fine sand and high humidity. The crowd was dense and unruly and moshed all over my cables and effects, spilling beer right and left, etc. Someone knocked my Strat over and dinged it bad; the jewel light on my vintage Vibrolux Reverb stopped working and the reverb knob broke in half; my Boss DM-2 gave up the ghost, almost nothing came through unscathed.

Of course the 66 been subjected to pretty heavy treatment throughout the last 19 months or so, but after that particular gig it looked like it had been through a war - caked in mud, paint-chipped all to hell, bits of mysterious color that could be vomit and/or blood as far as I can tell.

The Rte 66 never hiccupped, and worked just fine for the next three nights at a tamer venue.

So I just wanted to express kudos to Visual Sounds for building their stuff right.




Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
This is an update; see my Sep 2000 review.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $120.OO
Submitted 03/24/2002 at 08:23pm by GARY TAYLOR
Email: GARYSBLUES at MSN<dot>COM

Ease of Use : 10
OD AND COMP. WITH A BASS BOAST. TOOK ABOUT TEN SECONDS TO REALIZE THIS WAS AN INCREDIBLE SOUNDIND PEDAL.

Sound Quality : 10
PEDAL IS INCREDIBLE THE OD SOUND ALONE IS WORTH THE PRICE. THEN ADD A VERY VERY GOOD COMP. WITH A SMOOTH BASS BOAST. YOU CAN'T GO WRONG HERE.

Reliability : 10
I PLAY WITH AN ADAPTOR BUT SURE YOU COULD USE THIS PEDAL WITHOUT A BACKUP.

Customer Support : No Opinion
NEVER HAD A PROBLEM.

Overall Rating : 10
I PLAYED THROUGH EVERY OD PEDAL I CAME ACROSS. OWNED MOST AT ONE TIME OR ANOTHER. I PICKED THIS PEDAL UP IN A STORE JUST ON A WHIM. LIKE I SAID I'VE BEEN PLAYING THEM ALL AND LOOKING FOR A GREAT WARM BLUESY, TUBE SOUNDING PEDAL. THAT SOUNDED NATURAL,COULD HERE THE INDIVIDUAL NOTES WHEN CORDS ARE PLAYED. I TELL YOU, WHEN I PICKED UP THIS PEDAL MY JOURNEY ENDED. BIGGEST FEAR IS THEY'LL STOP MAKING THIS AND MINE WILL SHIT THE BED. ONE THING I HAVEN'T HEARD MENTIONED MUCH IN THE REVIEWS FOR THIS PEDAL. IT IS VERY, VERY, NOISY WHEN YOU PLAY THROUGH THE COMP. BUT THE SOUND WILL BLOW YOU AWAY A SUPERB SOUNDING COMP. AND THE BASS SWITCH IS LIKE GRAVY. REALLY.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $120
Submitted 03/22/2002 at 11:05am by Tim Brennan

Ease of Use : 9
The pedal combines a basic overdrive unit and a compressor, each with a separate footswitch. The overdrive unit has a limited range, so it's easy to get the good tones that it has. The compressor operation is also straightforward. The most important controls on each involve tone. The overdrive emphasizes low mids, even without the separate bass boost switch, so I tend to leave the tone control cranked up. The compressor is voiced brightly, so that tone control is left at about 12 o'clock.

Sound Quality : 8
Like lots of us, I've been through a zillion overdrive or distortion units. I went for this one because it combined a compressor and overdrive, and I think they all should. Sometimes you want the overdrive to kick in for background crunch, and for solos you want the volume boosted, and this does both. I'll never go back to a single footswitch pedal again.

The overdrive sound is pretty much a one-trick pony. It's a good simulation of straining the tubes, but the heavy metalers, or even Marshall/HiWatt aspirants, may find it lacking.

The compressor is a delight. Most compressors muddy the sound; this one brightens it. I use it mostly for a volume boost, but with just a touch of squeeze. It helps the overdrive stand out for solos, but with a great bonus--it makes the clean sounds better as well. A great example is that it compensates superbly for the loss in volume on the 2 and 4 positions on a Strat.

I give it a 9 for sound. I was tempted to go lower because the overdrive is only fine, with limited range, but the compressor convinces me to go higher.

Reliability : 9
The unit is in a solid metal box, and everything seems sturdy.

Customer Support : 9
I had a little trouble with another Visual Sound unit and compatibility with non-VS AC adapters. As other reviewers have noted, the head of Visual Sound will be right back to you to answer your email. I haven't had to exchange a product, but the help and support is fabulous.

Overall Rating : 9
I'm the sort of person who likes multiple separate effects, so I can control them on the fly rather than hoping that the pre-programmed sounds will cut it at the gig. For those like me, this is a great pedal. One can easily set it to give a good background distortion, tight projecting solos, and an excellent clean boost. The FullTone may have slightly better tone, but at a considerable price premium. A Sparkle Drive sounds good, too, but with only one switch, you can't easily control volume and have so much at one's command. If this disappeared, I'd get another.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $135
Submitted 03/07/2002 at 12:05pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
The overdrive is very easy to use, with the standard drive, tone, and volume controls. The compression also is controlled by 3 knobs, but it takes a bit of time to learn how to get useful sounds out of it, and also how to use it with the overdrive. The bass boost switch works on both of the other effects, and improves the entire pedal

Sound Quality : 9
The overdrive is one of the best I've ever used. Straight up it sounds like a TS-808, and with the bass boost switch it sounds even better, giving one of the smoothest and fattest overdrives I've ever heard outside of a tube amp. The compression is a bit harder to use, but serves very well as a tool to add a bit of boost to your signal, or to make your overall sound brighter and chimier. The compression is a bit noisy, but all compressions are.

Reliability : No Opinion
It hasn't broken yet, and seems well constructed.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I haven't dealt with them yet, but I have heard good things from others about their responsiveness and willingness to help.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
This is the best pedal I have found for getting versatile tube-like overdrive without having to dime a tube amp. If mine is lost I will buy another one. It will do anything from adding a bit of boost to your signal without changing its basic character to giving a solid hard rock sound (especially with the bass boost switch).


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid:
Submitted 02/21/2002 at 01:24pm by Don M
Email: chss at iworks<dot>net

Ease of Use : 10
Simple to use. The only odd thing is the 'home' position markers for the knobs are at 3 o'clock not 12 o'clock.

Sound Quality : 8
At first I wasn't overly impressed with the sound but I have grown to like it. The overdrive does colour the sound, but in a way that I like. There is a bass boost switch which is good in theory but is too woofy on the gain channel of my Marshall JTM 30. A pot to control the amount of bass would seem more useful to me. So the overdrive without it is a little thin. This thinness is an advantage in some ways. Ninth chords sit in the mix very nice this way. I had been yearning for more grind and harmonic content, but now I'm content with this overdrive adding a little burn to the notes.

The compressor I have no complaints about. It is fat sounding. If your clean sound is a little lame, this will deliver big time. I wish I had this years ago when I had done some county gigs.

To rate these individually I'd say the overdrive is an 8 and the compressor is a 9.

Reliability : 10
No problems here. I've gigged for about a year with it. Odd shape though.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I bought this at Steve's Music in Toronto. The salesperson mishandled the order twice. Next time I would probably buy it off ebay. The feedback system would keep bozos like this in check.

I don't have any beef with Visual Sound however, and I suspect that their great.

Overall Rating : 8
I'm fairly pleased with it. I would like to see more boost available on the overdrive side (the compressor side has a ton of boost). And the overdrive side could have a way to control the amount of bass.
Also on my rig (Nitefly or Jackson into JTM 30) the overdrive and compressor don't seem to work that well together, but sound fine individually.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $129.99
Submitted 02/14/2002 at 03:38pm by Bruce
Email: none

Ease of Use : 10
This pedal is very easy to use and the manual gives some great guidlines on settings.

Sound Quality : 10
The OD drive gives a great bluesy sound and the compressor works great for a clean boost. Also the bass boost switch with the OD makes for a great OD tone

Reliability : 9
It is very dependable and I gig without a backup.

Customer Support : 10
I promise you will not find better customer support any where. I have been emailed directly by the owner, even had a follow up phone call from the owner. Bob is a great person

Overall Rating : 10
I would buy this a again if it were stolen. I have been playing for 20 years. I like blues, southern rock, classic rock sounds. I primarily play praise and worship music.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $70 used
Submitted 02/04/2002 at 08:41am by Al

Ease of Use : 9
The unit is very self explanatory if you have worked either an overdrive or compression before.. Just set some dials and play.. You do need to play with the unit to get what you want, that's true for most pedals I think.

Sound Quality : 8
I play blues and classic rock, so the tones I'm looking for, depending on the tune, go from a Les Paul through a Marshall to SRV to BB King. My Amp and guitars helps with that to a great extent(a Rivera, Les Paul, 335 and a Strat), but this unit seems to help me to that end as well. If we are gigging in a space where I can't drive the output section of my amp as much as I would like, this unit seems to give me the added cruch and drive I'm looking for. This unit seems to give me both a warm compression sound (warm not meaning bassy, but as in un-harsh) very similiar to the Ross, yet without making my downstream effects hum. The Ross does sound better, but since it's apparently become collectable and valueable, I'll save that for recording or sell it. The overdrive is warm, the bass kick is nice depending on the guitar im using, through my les paul on the bridge pickup it can be nice, throughy my Strat on the neck pick-up it sounds like crap. Depends on the guitar and what you are playing. I am a lead guitar player, pure and simple. So lead tone, anywhere from searing and hot to SRV to cool jazz influenced, is what im chasing, depending on the tune. Bass flabbyness or too much bass is my enemy as well as enemic or harsh or brittle top end. I don't play metal, although I don't think a metal player would be all that interested in this pedal. I strongly state that WHAT you play and How you play are more important that ANYTHING a pedal, guitar or amp can add, but this pedal will certainly can add to your tone when used in the right spots.

Reliability : No Opinion
I have backup.. I never gig without backup of some sort. If it died during a gig, I'd go to plan B. It seems pretty sturdy to me. I haven't had it long enough to make any assesement here.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I have no idea.

Overall Rating : 8
For what I play, I like this pedal. I won't use it every song, as the song and the space will dictate what sounds best that day. I have other overdrive pedals (a FD2 and a Ts-9), both of which I have a like/dislike thing going. We all are searching for tone that fits us, that suits our styles. For me, this pedal will work for some circustances and tunes.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $80.00 used
Submitted 02/03/2002 at 08:37pm by Big "Goofy" Jim

Ease of Use : 9
It took me 30 seconds to dial in some nice overdrive. The manual says the overdrive was voiced to be like a Tube Screamer TS808, I found it between an early Boss OD-1 and a Tube Screamer (it could be a bit more transparent). The compression channel works better for clean boost (give your amp a little more headroom). However, I was also able to dial in some nice dirt on it as well. Running both channels together was tricky, but you can get some usable sounds out of it. The lay out is very simple and usable.

Sound Quality : 9
I have been playing with my 1965 stratocaster through a 1960 Tweed Vibrolux. I will be experimenting with some other sets up, but right now it works fine with the strat/vibrolux setup.

Reliability : No Opinion
I haven't had it long enough to rate it for reliability, but it looks to be pretty solid and should be fine....however, I would bring my Boss OD-2 as a backup (the Boss OD-2 I have is actully a nice pedal).

Customer Support : No Opinion
I haven't had to contact customer support and hope that I don't!

Overall Rating : 10
I play mostly Blues & Rock and this is a good pedal for style. I have been playing for about 7 years. I have been looking for a nice overdrive pedal and this one seems to be the one. I compared it to a Klon which would have cost $300.00. The Klon was a nice pedal, but I found this one to be it's equal and price was not the issue.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $119.00
Submitted 01/31/2002 at 12:52pm by ajs
Email: ajsl at aol<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
Easy to use. Manual is very basic but helpful as a starting point. Dials are self explanatory. Compressor side requires a little more tweaking.

Sound Quality : 10
I play a custon Fender strat with single coils and humbucker combinations. I play into a Mesa/Boogie subway rocket reverb and use the route 66 for a blues overdrive and the amps overdrive for the nasty stuff. The unit is quiet, even the compressor(for a compressor)and both sound great. You can get an SRV overdrive sound with the right tweaking and the compressor is great for a clean boost as well as adding a sparkle to the clean channel of my Boogie( not quite Fender clean). The compressor can also get a good squashed sound if thats what your into. I used to own a Boss blues driver and compressor/sustainer and the route 66 sounds much better to me. Especially the compressor.

Reliability : 10
I have owned it for about a year and have had no problems. I jam with friends about twice a month so it doesn't get much road abuse.

Customer Support : 10
I e-mailed visual sound once with some questions and my e-mail was replied to promtly. I don't see any problems here.

Overall Rating : 10
Excellent pedal for my style and use. I like mostly blues, some classic rock and am getting into jazz. This pedal will suit those styles for me.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $76 used
Submitted 01/04/2002 at 07:13am by Kevin
Email: kschmitz at edgerton<dot>k12<dot>wi<dot>us

Ease of Use : 9
Very user friendly, just turn the knobs to dial in a good tone. As was said before, running both effects at the same time can be tricky. The manual says to watch your levels if you're using both compression and overdrive. I tend to use one or the other.

Sound Quality : 9
I bought it mainly for the compression, and am very impressed. It has a snappy yet expansive sound, very old-school. I compared it with a Boss CS-3 and the the Route 66 sounded much better - more high end coming through, yet plenty of sustain. A very warm compression sound, and the clean boost (gain knob) was a nice feature as well. You can use this to drive your amp a little harder, or balance out the volume levels. The overdrive side (tubescreamer 808 clone) is also a great sound - round and smooth, rather transparent. I use it as an "extra" overdrive on top of my amps dirty channel for over-the-top distortion, or as a different sound from my amp's distortion.

Reliability : 9
Seems solid, not quite as tough looking as a Boss pedal, but definitely quality construction.

Customer Support : 10
Excellent customer support. He answers e-mails promptly and is happy to answer your questions. I've never had problems with VS products, but did have some questions before buying.

Overall Rating : 10
A great pedal. I use the compression for clean guitar sounds, especially when playing slide guitar. The overdrive side is really just a bonus for me - I'd buy this for the compression alone. The unit has a warm analog sound, and it's hard to get a bad sound out of it. Definitely blows away the Boss compressors, and having two pedals (plus the clean boost) for the price of one, how can you go wrong?


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $129
Submitted 12/22/2001 at 10:33pm by stuart k. pitman (of Sometimes Why)
Email: s2art<at>n2 dot com

Ease of Use : 9
It is somewhat difficult to figure out how to use the two effects together (volume) other than that it is quite basic

Sound Quality : 10
This box far exceeds most others I have tried. The Route 66 and a fender tele make a perfect match (esp. with the use of the bass boost). The Edge just ordered 2 of them and Daniel Lanios picked up one himself. You can't go wrong here.

Reliability : No Opinion
I have personally never experienced problems but I have heard these little boxes can have some problems...

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

Overall Rating : 10
This is a great general overdrive. Buy one and then buy another for your best friend.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US trade
Submitted 11/24/2001 at 12:14pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
very easy to set up-manual has a few sample settings to get you started.

Sound Quality : 9
good compressor-i wonder what(if anything)it's modelled after? the 808 side is cool with the bass boost...both sides together aren't that noisy if reasonably set.

Reliability : No Opinion
who knows?

Customer Support : No Opinion
heard they were good to deal with-hope i don't have to.

Overall Rating : 9
nice concept-an OD with a compressor that can be used like seperate effects or together...i also have their jekyll&hyde OD which gets used quite a bit-this one has it's own set of uses.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $70.00 fire sale
Submitted 10/08/2001 at 07:52pm by jeremy
Email: none

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy to use, three knobs per side with a bass boost. The bass boost is too boomy for my taste. I got it from a fire sale at a store, it reaally did survive a fire, and it works well. What impresses me the most is that it by-passes beautifully. So many pedals can't by-pass to save their life (ProCo Rat, ElectroHarmonix, Marshall). This does, switching is silent and the tone is very good (especially the compression).

Sound Quality : 8
Overdrive is about a 7. It clips in pretty well, but gets woofy, especially with the bass boost. The compression is very good, about a 9. Keeps the sound very tight in my Mesa-Boogie Studio Caliber (I highly reccomend this amp or any Boogie). I use: G&L S500 stock, Fender Squire MIJ 83 with Rio Grande Tallboys (N & M) with a Lindy Fralin Steel Pole in the Bridge, home built swamp ash tele with Bill Lawrence 280 (N) 290 (B). Works well with all of these axes (overdrive is great with the tele).

Reliability : 8
Seems pretty solid. I'd preffer a sealed chassis to prevent dust build up. Quiet switching (SwitchCraft) and good point to point soldering. Yeah, you could go without a backup. Just keep plenty of batteries (Radio Shack house brand rocks. Dollar for dollar, better value than anyone). If the chassis were a unit of one (sealed welds at the folds and points, it'll get a ten).

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't had to deal with them.

Overall Rating : 9
I'm a rock/blues player, some metal. This is basically a really good pedal. I'm still tweaking between everything (Rocktron Rampage Distortion, Morely Pro Wha) and this is a good value of a pedal. Very brown sound for you EVH fans. Created some great classic sounds in the Rhythm Section of my amp (AC/DC, Led Zep) The compression works really well for clean or overdrive/distortion sections. Clean, makes great Metallica (Enter Sandman opening section) sound. Clipped overdrive gets some pretty rootsy Texas blues. Pushed out gets a bit too muddy for me. Like I said, I'm still working with it and don't plan to get rid of it. I like it, and for $70-$100+, you are getting two very functional pedals for the dime. Does the Overdrive work as well as a TS-9? Well, the by-pass works better and the tone is pretty damn good. Easy to match amp level to pedal level. I've been as honest as possible about this and the only thing that I can say is drive the guys at your local music store nuts by trying everything. Get on an amp that is much like yours and an axe. Plug in, play open chords and check the by-pass, levels on and off. Plug in direct to the amp, then back through the pedal. When it's off (the pedal), does it screw with the sound? Bad pedal to have. Seek out Rocktron Pedals as well, they are amazing.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $119
Submitted 08/22/2001 at 12:33pm by James Flowers
Email: samflowers at ala<dot>net

Ease of Use : 10
3 knobs on each channel. That's it. It took me about 5 minutes to get a killer sound

Sound Quality : 10
I'm using a PRS McCarty thru a mesa boogie Nomad. I also run a TS-9 into the Route 66 to a crybaby wah into a boss delay. First off, the overdrive was pretty nice. I prefer the TS-9 sound (a little darker) but I use it as a bit of a boost. The compressor is what blew me away. The compressed clean tone is perfect. I love that squashed sound it adds. Overdriven is just as good. I don't use tons of gain for the most part, but every note sings w/ this thing on. Lead tones are perfect, especially with the neck pickup. I am a big fan of Phish, and right when I plugged this pedal in, I got that smooth, squishy Trey Anastasio tone. I recommend this pedal to anyone who wants a fat huge blues sound.

Reliability : No Opinion
I haven't had a problem yet, and it seems very solid

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 10
I have been playing for about 8 years now, and I play classic rock, jam stuff (Phish, Dead) and originals. This pedal is a true step up for me in tone. Good overdrive and fabulous compression(beats the hell out of the Dynacomp). Turn this thing on and immediately notice a kick ass difference in tone.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: 800 (Rand (South Africa))
Submitted 06/20/2001 at 05:14pm by juan
Email: juanmuys at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
No manual needed. If you can make a cup of coffee, you can operate this...

Sound Quality : 9
My main guitar is a Gretsch Electromatic. The Rt.66 is the only stomp-box in my signal-path. I push the signal into a Torque R50 (a solid-state Brit-make amp). Man, does it sound like a valve amp! Especially with the compressor added to the mix. When I switch from treble to rhythm (on the guitar), my leads really cuts through the symbals. Great dynamics.

The gain and volume on the pedal is more than enough (lots of headroom). There's no hum on the OD. The comp (like any other, I suppose) has a bit of a hum.

I pretty much go for a seventies-rock sound. I find that the Rt.66 has a mix of clean sound with the OD, which I love.

If you don't want a sterile stereotyped sound, buy this baby...

Reliability : 10
I've been using it for almost 1 year now, and no problems (yet)...

Customer Support : No Opinion
No support needed. It looks good from the other reviews.

Overall Rating : 9
I've been playing for 4 1/2 years. Our band is grungy, with a 70's rock influence.

Other gear includes: Marshall TSL100 amp, BOSS Wah (total piece of shit, I've tried the Morley. Much better!), Zoom 505 (restricted piece of crap), Marshall Vibratrem (good piece of equipment).

I would defintely replace it if it gets stolen, or such.

I had a Marshall Guv'nor in mind, but the salesperson convinced me to get the Rt.66. I prefer the Rt.66... (anyhow, it's 2 in 1). And it's ALL I need.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $70 used
Submitted 05/27/2001 at 10:21am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 10
Both the compressor and the orverdrive are very easy to use, manual tells you what you need to know!

Sound Quality : 10
I use both humbuckers and single coil guitars, Fender Princeton Chorus combo (for practice), and strait to the "board" at Church (where I play)I'm not sure you can get a BAD sound out of this unit, both sides have worked well together for me so far! The compressor can be a little noisy but not bad at all. Sounds great, I've heard lots of coments ,,,,, and all have been good!!!!!!!!

Reliability : 10
This thing is built very , very solid,,,,,, Yes I'll go without a back up!

Customer Support : 10
I emailed them, and Bob Weil himself got back to me the very next day,,,,, he was extremely helpful and a very nice guy to boot.

Overall Rating : 10
I play Cristian contemporary , Praise&Worship, with heavey rock/blues flavor. I've been playing over 20 years.If it was lost/stolen I'd try to find another used one and IF I had the money would buy a new one the next day.I have had/have these overdrives,,, Arion, Boss SD-1,and Multi FX units with OD and I have these other compressor pedals, Pearl , Boss CS-3. This is a very musical unit, YES it helps me make music!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $130
Submitted 04/10/2001 at 05:01am by Fred Centrella
Email: fcentrella<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 8
2 sections - 3 knobs each - 1 footswitch for each section. Ok it's not an MXR single knob phaser but it still ain't rocket science.

Sound Quality : 10
I use this device with a Tele Plus thru either a Peavey delta Blues (great amp) or Fender Blues Junior (so I've got an EL-84 fixation). Very low noise even on high gain settings with a battery but if using an adapter (wall wart) you MUST use one of the suggested models otherwise there is a loud hum from the compressor side. This is NOT the fault of the unit al all; it's just letting you know it wants REGULATED juice. The compressor, at low settings adds a lot of sparkle and presence to the Telecaster. I don't use high comp settings much but they are very musical and make the not sing a long time. The overdrive section is unreal. Move over TS-808! The bass boost switch puts SERIOUS bottom on the sound but it NEVER sounds muddy. I have been all over the lot on the dials on both sides - there is not a bad sound there. VS has done their homework (unlike a lot of my students!).

Reliability : 10
Check out the metal case - can you say indestructible? I knew you could. OK I wouldn't let my pet elephant stand on it but it sould withstand serious abuse (but then I don't abuse any of my gear either so it should last forever). Backups? We don't need no stinking backups!

Customer Support : 10
I e-mailed VS about the aforementioned hum with my adapter and they got back to me with info within 2 days - I got an e-mail from the boss while he was in Asia and was informed the day I e-mailed him that there might be a delay due to his trip - fantastic support as far as I'm concerned. VS is a great comapny to do business with.

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I originally got this after reading a guitar player review and being ticked at the long wait for a Voodoo Sparkle Drive. Am I glad I switched my order - this thing is a two for one pedal that blows any TS-808 or clone away. As far as I'm concerned the Route 66 should be THE choice for a blues/rock OD.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 03/09/2001 at 03:29pm by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 8
This pedal is very easy to use, as long as you view it as 2 seperate pedals. Features have already been covered.

Sound Quality : 6
I am using this with an american Tele and an SRV strat. Also have used it with a Washburn 335 style guitar. For amps I'm using a Twin and a Laney VC-30 (vox rip off). The sound is good, but not very inspiring. It is your basic overdrive, but that is what it is meant to be. I use the pedal with the tone about halfway up, the volume set to half, and the drive completely off. My amp is turn up to the brink of distortion. I am trying to get a sound that remniscent of a cranked amp(isn't everyone?)and while I can get a passable sound, the clarity that I am searching for is not there. The compression is nothing spectacular. While I can use it to add sustain, I find it different to get a very squishy sound.

Reliability : 10
This pedal is extremely dependable. I've been gigging with it for almost 2 years and have had no problems. The paint, however, is not so reliable. It has been severly scuffed. The Route 66 logo is almost gone. But this, for me, is really not an issue.

Customer Support : No Opinion
never dealt with them

Overall Rating : 7
I play music that is best described as Zep meats Phish with plenty of funk thrown in. Also, I aspire to play jazz. This pedal, dispite it's lack of overall clarity, is well suited for these styles of music(except the jazz). I've been playing for about 4 years. I own a bunch of other pedals, but this is my only overdrive. It gets the job done. I like the idea of putting two effects together, but, while I do like it, I don't love the actual sound of these effects either seperate or used together. If it had a better a compression and a more natural overdrive sound I would never get rid of it. It can help me make music I suppose, but then again the music I make is not that good. If your looking for a good sounding workhorse OD pedal this would be a good choice.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: i stole it
Submitted 02/26/2001 at 07:56am by bob
Email: daza81<at>yahoo dot co dot uk

Ease of Use : 10
it's really easy to get to grips with.overdrive and compressor that can be used seperately or both together just like 2 seperate pedals.

Sound Quality : 10
i think it sounds amazing.even at it's highest settings you can hear every note which is good.it doesn't turn into mush.it's also really loud which is great.too many pedals have to be maxed out in order to match up your bypassed and effected sound.
the compressor is one of the best i've heard.gives plenty of sustain and works well with other effects.
the bass boost switch rarely gets turned off.it gives the overdrive a real deep tone but still stays clear.

Reliability : 10
i've had it for about 3 hours and it still hasn't broken.that must be a record.

Customer Support : 10
i phoned them up and they shouted at me.oh well

Overall Rating : 10
overall i can't be bothered typing anymore.
buy it if you want.
i couldn't care less


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $99.00
Submitted 02/03/2001 at 03:51pm by Ty Gerhardt
Email: tygerhardt<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 8
This is a fairly easy to use straight forward two in one pedal. While it's easy to get good sounds out of the compressor and the overdrive individually, making them work well individually and together is a little more difficult. It's a brain buster or anything like that, but it does take a little more effort that just plugging in and playing. The sample settings that come with the manual are usefull for getting your feet wet.

Sound Quality : 9
Let me start off by saying that I really love this pedal. My best friend bought one (see the review a little ways down by "Parenthetical") and despite some inital problems really liked it. He he brought it over for me to try out with some new amps that I had bought and at the time I thought it was pretty cool. I really liked the compressor a lot. It gave me the kind of boost that I like for vintage instrumental rock like Link Wray, The Ventures, etc. as well as a nice fat lead tone for clean or dirty sounds. At the time I had a Budda Phatman pedal that I thought was OK and I was looking to buy the Full Drive 2 so I didn't rush right out to get one. A few months later my friend and I were at his studio in preperation for a recording project that we're doing together. I brought my Full Drive 2 over and tried it out through his blackface modified Deluxe Reverb. The Full Drive 2 sounded great (like it does with all of my amps). I then tried the Route 66 through the Deluxe and I was torn between the Full Drive 2 and the Route 66. I like the zesty powerful sound that the Full Drive 2 has, but I also love the slightly mellower drive with a hint of clean tone of the Route 66 and that compressor. Wow! The tone and versitility of this pedal just floored me. What finally clinched it for me was the fact that I was having tremendous difficulty getting a Carl Martin compressor for my pedal board thanks to American Musical Supply which had been on backorder forever. I finally said screw it and cancelled the order and went to Musician's Friend where I got the Route 66 for $99 saving me a ton of cash over the Carl Martin. So not only did I get a kick ass compressor I also got another great overdrive tone for my pedal board. At $99 I can't see why anyone would bother buying a Tube Screamer reissue. With the bass boost you get everything you wish the TS9 had plus you get one of the most musical compressor pedals out there that will provide you with endlessly sustaining overdrive. What a screaming deal. I can also be a witness to the fact that these work great on bass too. My friend played his Fender Jazz Bass Elite through the Route 66 into a 50 watt JCM800 into a 2x10 and a 1x15 cab. The sound was very punchy and tight without sounding small and clicky. When he kicked in the overdrive it didn't wuss out like some overdrives do with bass. As far as my own set up goes, I have an obscene number of amps, guitars and pedals so I really have had a chance to put this pedal through it's paces. I mostly use Fender, Marshall, Hiwatt, and Orange amps (vintage and vintage reissue) and American Fender, Hamer USA and Gretsch guitars. For pedasls I usually prefer Fulltone, Electro Harmonix, and Danelectro. I play a wide variety of guitar oriented styles from Oldies instrumental, Noies pop and some heavy stuff. The Route 66 pedal is on par with the Full Drive 2. That's not to say they sound the same, but the quality of the sound and workmanship are on about the same level. If you can afford it, get them both. You won't be dissapointed. One other awesome thing about the Route 66 pedal is it's built in buffering. When I put the Route 66 pedal before my tone eating Electro Harmonix pedals (they don't have true bypass) instead of the muddy tone I normally get when they're bypassed, I get the same sound I get when I'm plugged into my amp. As if the Route 66 wasn't cool enough without the buffering! Not only does it sound awesome, but it makes my other pedals sound better. I couldn't be more pleased. (P.S. If you are a fan of the Small Stone, Small Clone or Electric Mistress, the Route 66's overdrive works amazingly well with these effects [I think it's because of the hint of clean signal in the Route 66's overdrive] and the comrpessor works great with the Big Muff for fat sustaining tones.)

Reliability : 8
I have not had any problems in the short amount of time that I have owned mine and the other times I have played my friend's I have not experienced any problems, but his didn't work when he first got it so that has me a little worried. However, I dont expect to have too many (if any) problems with mine. It seems very well made.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I have not had to deal with them but I hear they are the definition of customer support

Overall Rating : 10
This pedal is an unbeatable value. You would not be able to find an overdrive and a compressor that sounds this awesome for $99 PERIOD. Not even for the $129 price that these normally go for (not even for the $169 list price). Add in the built in buffering and this pedal becomes a must have. Hell, even your mom can appreciate that. If it were lost or stolen, I'd buy two. Seriously! I'm thinking of buying a second one for my bass rig.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $129
Submitted 01/31/2001 at 09:13am by Anonymous

Ease of Use : 9
Pretty simple. If you know how to use a pedal...

Sound Quality : 9
I loved the sound of this pedal. The overdrive and comp. were both great effects seperately and together. I could get some cool psychedelic era sounds out of it and even some Trey Anastasio tone. The volume would kind of get out of control when the effects were used together, but all it took was some fine tuning of some volume knobs and all was well.

Reliability : 3
This is where I'm dissapointed. I have had two of these pedals, and both of them had the same problem. The overdrive and compression stopped functioning together but worked seperately. The first one i had worked for about two weeks, but then this happened and i sent it back to musicians friend and they sent me a new one. The new one worked great for about two days. I am never rough with my pedals and i am dissapointed that this happened. I am going to return it this time and buy like five of those litte dano pedals for the same price.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I got a new one when my first one broke, but that is musicians friend and not visual sound so i dont really know

Overall Rating : No Opinion


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $129
Submitted 01/17/2001 at 04:26am by dan barker
Email: spicybbq at rocketmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 4
i dont like this thing. it sound slike crap through my amp. if your looking for a nice blues lead pedal i wouldnt buy this one. and if you are in fact interested in one anyway you can buy mine ;)

Sound Quality : 2
I dont like it at all for the overdrive. The compressor side is pretty nice though. im running it through a fender american strat with EMG SA pickups --the dave gilmour setup. the overdrive sounds like crap.

Reliability : 10
hasnt failed me yet...then again i never use the piece of crap.

Customer Support : No Opinion

Overall Rating : 3
DONT BUY THIS. this is a waste of money. i want to get rid of mine after having it for a few weeks.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $120
Submitted 12/30/2000 at 12:53am by Davor Pavuna
Email: pavuna at bluewin<dot>ch

Ease of Use : 9
EASY, but not obvious how to adjust compressor vs overdrive:
a ot of experimentation needed wth a set up you
actually use.

Sound Quality : 9
Compressor gets 10 - probably the ost musical out there !

The overdrive gets only 8 as I must confess that SansAmp Clasic,
TubeScreamer TS-5 and also the Award JD-20 produce smoother
overdrive that integrates BETER than the one in tis box:
strange but true.

While the compressor is a winner and I eep it on all te time
the overdrive I switch only to add an extra sustain to
already singing guitar (say to sustain a note like Gary Moore does).

Reliability : 9
OK in my gigs so far.

Customer Support : 10
Nice replies from the manufacturer.

Overall Rating : 9
I play Strats or Les Pauls through CryBaby Vah then into Route 66
compressor then into Award JD-20 overdrive (or SansAmp Classic
or sometimes TS-5 for extra tube-push) into the Fender Champ
all Tube 12 combo: and it sings - FABULOUS.

As I said the overdrive is not easily used with compressor
yet it does a nice job on its own as a blues overdrive.

Not evident how to optimally combine te two !
Needs some experimenation.

Recommendation: if you are a serious guitarist - BUY ONE!

The compressor will greatly improve your tube sound!

YES, the COMPRESSOR alone is worth the price and the
OD is handy, but you may use another OD in series as I do.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $109
Submitted 11/03/2000 at 12:44pm by Scott Davis
Email: exit42 at gj<dot>net

Ease of Use : 10
This pedal is self-explanatory. After owning five different multi-effects processors, I went back to stomp boxes. This thing is as easy as turning a couple of knobs and dialing in what you want to hear. Knobs are easy, with plenty of room to get your fingers on them.

Sound Quality : 9
I gave this a 9 because I'm not sure I could ever find a perfect 10. The Route 66 comes very close, at least for my needs. I use it with a Nashville Deluxe Tele, and sometimes a Strat, into either a Peavey Classic 50/410 or a Music Man HD212. It took a little time to play around with it and find the sounds I was looking for. It was just a matter of playing with it a lot and finding out what it will do. I love the compressor side, as it beats up anything else I have used. On top of that, it is very usable, either as a clean boost or with a bit of "squash" to balance everything out. It took me a little while to experiment with the overdrive side, but I finally found the correct adjustments for me, and it gets better every time I use it. I don't use the bass boost much, because it doesn't suit my style or my set-up. I've never been a huge fan of heavy bottom in the lead guitar anyway. But, if you like that, the bass boost works great.

Reliability : 10
So far it is a workhorse. We play twice a week on average, and I haven't had a bit of trouble. I would use it without a backup. I do have to qualify that because I have about 20 different pedals stored in my equipment trailer. However, I never pull one out "just in case". I have great confidence in this pedal

Customer Support : No Opinion
The only contact I had was when I emailed them to find out about AC adapter compatability. They responded immediately, and thanked me for buying their pedal. He also said that if I had any questions or problems to contact him. I would have to say that they probably stand by their products 100%. Hopefully, this one will last and I'll never have to use them.

Overall Rating : 10
I hate to keep giving 10's, but this pedal deserves them. We play primarily hot rod country and older rock, and this pedal does everything I ask it to do. The sound is great. I've stripped my rig down to the Route 66, a Chorus, and a tap delay. If I was going to be picky, I would like some way to balance the effects outputs so the volume is consistent when using the effects together. I set the volume on the compressor side, and I set the volume on the overdrive side. When you play them together, the volume becomes too loud, and you have to back one of them off. I don't even know if it is possible to do this from an engineering standpoint.
If this pedal was stolen, I would order another one immediately.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $105 plus shipping
Submitted 09/17/2000 at 12:15pm by J turnpike
Email: lpjoe at yahoo<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
The pedal is well laid out, with three knobs dedicated to the OD side of the pedal, and three for the compression side. The knobs have a slightly soft and rubbery feel, making them easy to turn without slipping.

A printed sheet came with the unit listing a bunch of sample settings for each side of the pedal, plus both effects combined. They were sort of useful as a starting point, although I found the suggested gain to be too high on just about all of the samples. I ended up coming up with my own settings after experimenting.

Knowing it wouldn't be very convenient to bend down and change the settings while playing, I spent about an hour finding good settings for each side before taking it out for its first gig.

Sound Quality : 10
I'm primarily using a Fender Am. Deluxe Strat with Vintage Noiseless p/u's through Fender RocPro 1000 amp. In case you're not familiar with the amp, let me just quickly point out -- because this is relevant to why I needed this pedal and how I'm using it -- that it's a 100-watt amp with a solid-state power amp and tube pre-amp. It has a clean channel and a gain channel with a choice of two OD settings, thus giving you, in effect, three channels. This amp sounds great cranked, but I've found that at lower volume settings the sound is a little thin and lacking oomph, even when using the OD settings. I've been playing with a band that does roots rock, blues and reggae at a couple of small clubs, and the other guys in the band use smaller amps, and I was just finding that the RocPro was wimping out at that level. I sort of figured I'd have to go out and get another amp, something like a Peavey Classic 30 or a Fender Blues Jr. to get that cranked sound, but after reading a few reviews I thought I'd try the Route 66 first, figuring if it didn't work out I could sell it and try another amp.

I guess it's obvious I'm not much into pedals. I've just about always relied on cooking the amp to get the sound I wanted, dating back to the days when I played through a 100-watt Marshall double stack or the old Fender Super that I wish I'd never sold.

Anyway this pedal has done exactly what I'd hoped it would. Running the comp side adds a surprising amount of sparkle to my tone at the volume levels we're playing at, not to mention the general 'thickening' I expected. That side produces a fair amount of hum, but it's not at all noticeable when playing with the band.

When I experimented with the settings at home, I liked the OD side and the comp side separately, but not so much together. It just got a little wild. However in the course of the first set I played live with this thing, I quickly got to liking the two together, typically playing rhythym and soft fills with the comp side only -- in other words pretty much leaving it on all the time -- and then punching the OD side when I increased attack to take a solo. I was pretty careful to set the gain on both sides, incidentally, so that there wasn't a real noticeable volume boost when playing them together. What the OD side added to the mix was a slight softening of the sonic edges, taking away the icepick quality that would have resulted if I'd whacked away at full pick attack using the comp side and my Strat volume knob only. It sounded very cool to my ears and I could see that it struck the other guitarist and the musos in the audience who were paying attention. It also produced the perfect amount of sustain -- not artificially long but that clear Strat kind of sustain that comes through in, say, Jimi's Voodoo Chile (not the Slight Return version that everyone plays nowadays but the loose jamming one that never gets on the 'greatest hits' collections).

A couple comments on the settings. I'm deliriously glad that both sides of the pedal have tone controls, as I find I need to really crank the EQ toward the high side to produce a tone that matches the straight guitar-to-amp tones I usually play. Without the tone up to around 3 o'clock, it's too dark for my tastes.

The other thing is that I have to keep the gain/volume down on both sides, again to match the gain of the guitar straight, as I'm not looking for volume -- the RocPro already has too much for this gig -- but rather tone.

With these two parameters figured out, I can set the EQ and gain/volume knobs on both sides and leave them. That means I only have to mess with the level controls (Sustain on the compside, Drive on the OD side)to adjust for tone.

It also means I don't even hook up the channel footswitch for the amp, since I play this pedal through the clean channel. I tried it out in combination with the RocPro's drive channels and it just didn't allow the pedal to perform at its optimum, in my opinion.

To sum

Reliability : No Opinion
I've only used it a few times so far but it seems really well built. I'd love to have a backup, and when I get back to the States I might get one.

One comment I can make about its toughness is that I had Visual Sounds ship it to San Diego, and from San Diego a friend shipped it to me in Chiang Mai, Thailand, so it probably got knocked around quite a bit, yet worked fine as soon as I slipped a 9 volt into its underside.

Customer Support : No Opinion
I traded a couple emails with Visual Sounds, mostly trying to figure out which pedal was right for me, their Jekyll & Hide or the Route 66. They tried to put me on the right track, but really without hearing me play there's no way ... Hey did I think they'd be clairvoyant or something?

But I came away with the general feeling that if I should have trouble with this pedal, they'd probably stand behind their work.

Overall Rating : 10
I compared features with several others -- Fulltone, ZVex, Barber, etc -- and this seemed to have exactly what I was looking for. I'm sure those other pedals are good, but the combo of OD and compression was just what I was looking for. I'm really happy because this pedal saved me the cost of buying a smaller amp. Funny how you can get big tone out of small amp but you can't get big tone out of big amp at low settings. I think all 100watt amps should be switchable to 25watts for small club gigs, studio, and practice.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $120
Submitted 08/16/2000 at 09:34am by Vol. Knob
Email: TortoiseThinline at tdpri<dot>every1<dot>net

Ease of Use : 9
The hardest thing about using the pedal is deciding how you want it dialed in. You've got one side "Based" upon the fabled TS-808 (with added "Bass Boost" switch), and the other is a compressor. The manual states how to use it, which is obcious, plus it gives some recomended settings that are decent enough, plus a good reference if you'r not sure how to use the two funcitons togethr or have little exoeriance with a compressor.

Sound Quality : 9
I use this baby with a Blues Pearl Texas Tornado (Copy of a Fender Deluxe) and either a '69 Thinline RI or a '68 Strat RI. Sometimes I use this pedal alone or with a Fultone '69, Cry baby, Big Muff pi, Danelectro Tuna Melt, Arion Delay or Chorus. But mostly by itself.

The Overdrive sounds nice and rich, not too gainy and not fizzy at all. The Compressor is lush, squashed, or crystalin, depending on how you dial it in. Can be used as a "Clean Boost" too. The two together can be a smooth sustainy treat (yeah!!!). Great for controlled feedback without the noise. Also, I like to put my Fuzz pedals in front of this to drive it to more violin-like sustain.

Reliability : 9
Built like a tank. My one complaint would be the battery hatch, but that's a minmal complaint and has not been a problem. The knobs appear to be solid enough, the box itself is sturdy, and the switches are quite confidant.
I'd gig without a backup and not even worry.

Customer Support : 9
Never had a problem, can't tell yet. I'll trust that their customer service can be reflected by the fact that this thing doesnt have any issues...

Overall Rating : No Opinion
I play Blues/Classic Rock/Psychadellic/Avante Garde/Alternawhatever. I try to use more late '60s early 70's influenced tones, this thing helps me to nail them.
If it were stolen or died in a fire, I'd replace it. I've heard this thing called "The Poor Mans Fulldrive", I don't know how accurate that is, I've plugged into one of those only once, but I'd quote that from what I can tell about the simalarities in the two boxes.

I use this baby every time I play.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: 119 (UK pounds)
Submitted 05/25/2000 at 06:11pm by Tre Sheppard
Email: sheppardt at compuserve<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
Really easy to use, particularly if you're familiar with compression-the manual also has some sample settings which are good starting points-Actually, it's pretty hard to get a bad sound of this pedal

Sound Quality : 10
I use the Route 66 with a Tele, a Rickenabacker 360 and a PRS all into a Vox AC-30 or a modded Fender Hot Rod Deluxe-It's part of my pedalboard setup of Vox wah>Boss CS-3>Vox Valvetone>Route 66>Ernie Ball Volume Pedal>Boss Tremolo>Boss Delay- The Route 66 is fantastic. I bought it for the overdrive side, but the compressor has become my favorite. The OD is based on the TS-808 and does sound great...the bass switch adds that nice low end oomph, especially with the Tele, and it has a wonderful transparent quality...but the compressor is amazing. It fattens up my sound so much without losing the dynamics of the attack-I mainly use it as a clean boost, to push the AC-30 over the edge and kick a song into that other level, but it sounds so good that I wish I had another Route 66 just for the compressor to add that fat warmth all the time. I realise this is a bit effusive, but it is a fantastic tone. There is nothing quite like stepping on that compressor button and kicking back in with the band-it's like a house falls on the place, just epic. The best thing I can say about it is that I feel that the Route 66 has made me a better player because of the confidence I have with it on my pedal board. I'll stop there as it's starting to sound like I work for Visual Sound or something....

Reliability : 8
Well. My band plays live very regularly and travels quite extensively internationally. So far I've dragged this pedal to South Africa, Finland and all over England in the 4-5 months I've had it. I've only recently gotten a decent roadcase for my pedals after driving myself crazy traveling around with a piece of wood with velcro on it, so I wasn't totally surprised when the switch on the OD side gave me some trouble last week while we were on tour in Finland. I sprayed some contact cleaner on it and stepped on the switch about twenty times and it worked for the rest of the tour so I was stoked that it worked, but a little bummed that it gave me a hassle.

Customer Support : 10
Okay, this is the reason I'm even writing this review-When the pedal gave me some trouble last week, I called Visual Sound and left a message on the Friday night before we flew out of London to Finland explaining the switch problem and asking for help. The next day (Saturday!) we were in the Arctic Circle to start the tour and Bob, the owner of Visual Sound, called me on my cellphone to try and help me figure out the problem. He didn't have a distributor in Finland but he told me some stuff to try and said he'd send a new switch to London immediately so it would be there when I got home. Sure enough, we got home two days ago and there was my new switch. Needless to say, I was totally impressed by that level of customer service. Bob, you rock. Too bad there's no eleven for this category.

Overall Rating : 10
This is my first review here although I do check in and read stuff often. I'm a bit of a tone hound, but at the end of the day I really appreciate gear that helps me get the sound I want easily night after night on the road. When I read stuff here, I usually think that I should write a few reviews after all the rubbish I've tried in pursuit of a good honest raw tone. But frankly, I've never cared enough about a piece of gear to take the time to write a review until I got the Route 66 and had some contact with Bob at Visual Sound. Hence the review, which I realise is a bit glowing, but hey, I really like the pedal and the company and I've got the hours of use to back it up. I highly recommend it...even more than the Jekyll and Hyde-now if Bob would only make a pedal with just the compressor....


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $100
Submitted 05/22/2000 at 04:08pm by Rob
Email: mikopita<at>hotmail dot com

Ease of Use : 9
This pedal really is a piece of cake if you've been playing for a while. One side is setup like a TS-808 while the other is a Compressor/Sustainor. The instruction sheet can give you a push if you can't figure it out too.

Sound Quality : 10
I am using a Strat with Rio Grande pickups (2 halfbreeds N/M, Muy Grande B) into various effects (depending on the gig or session) into a Fender Hot Rod Deluxe. This pedal is exactly what I have been looking to find for years!!! I have had PRS, Gibson, Yamaha and Ibanez guitars running into Several Boogies, Marshall and Ampeg amps and must say that my setup is the best ever. (The PRS into the MKIII was awesome but I still think that this sound is better) If used properly, you can get any sound out of this pedal you want. I use it rather minimally on the settings and set a modded TS-9 after it for really hot and crunchy sounds. Otherwise the three different combinations possible with the pedal at a time are incredible. The compressor/sustainor channel alone is worth the money. The screaming clean leads I get from it are sweet and singing. Kicking in the overdrive with the bass boost is a dream for both leads and rhythm.
I only had one problem with this pedal (read below)

Reliability : 7
My first gig out with this thing was a disaster. I went to hit a lead, and the sound died. I took it home to re-create the problem, and it would. It seems that there might be some kind of issue with using batteries with this thing. After 5-15 minutes of use mine would die out one channel at a time (starting with the compression) even with brand new batteries. I bought a boss 9v regulated adapter and now it works like a dream. Everyone that hears my sound now exclaims that I have a sweet smooth tone. The reliability has been great since then. I'll give a 7 here only because of that fateful gig.

Customer Support : 10
Bob is a great guy. He offered to pay for shipping and get my pedal back to me the next day..... I love the pedal too much to let go for even that long.

Overall Rating : 10
I play a wide variety of styles... Jazz, Funk, R&B, Country, WorldBeat, Fusion, Rock, Latin (I stay away from heavy metal and the likes usually). This pedal is perfect for what I do.
I have been playing guitar for 17 years, and am really actually a bass player by nature and own mostly bass gear. If stolen, I would run (not walk) and get a new one. This thing smokes my Modded TS-9.
If you are looking for that smooth sustainy sound (especially for a strat), check this thing out.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $100
Submitted 05/22/2000 at 07:07am by Rob
Email: mikopita at hotmail<dot>com

Ease of Use : 9
This pedal really is a piece of cake if you've been playing for a while. One side is setup like a TS-808 while the other is a Compressor/Sustainor. The instruction sheet can give you a push if you can't figure it out too.

Sound Quality : 10
I am using a Strat with Rio Grande pickups (2 halfbreeds N/M, Muy Grande B) into various effects (depending on the gig or session) into a Fender Hot Rod Deluxe. This pedal is exactly what I have been looking to find for years!!! I have had PRS, Gibson, Yamaha and Ibanez guitars running into Several Boogies, Marshall and Ampeg amps and must say that my setup is the best ever. (The PRS into the MKIII was awesome but I still think that this sound is better) If used properly, you can get any sound out of this pedal you want. I use it rather minimally on the settings and set a modded TS-9 after it for really hot and crunchy sounds. Otherwise the three different combinations possible with the pedal at a time are incredible. The compressor/sustainor channel alone is worth the money. The screaming clean leads I get from it are sweet and singing. Kicking in the overdrive with the bass boost is a dream for both leads and rhythm.
I only had one problem with this pedal (read below)

Reliability : 7
My first gig out with this thing was a disaster. I went to hit a lead, and the sound died. I took it home to re-create the problem, and it would. It seems that there might be some kind of issue with using batteries with this thing. After 5-15 minutes of use mine would die out one channel at a time (starting with the compression) even with brand new batteries. I bought a boss 9v regulated adapter and now it works like a dream. Everyone that hears my sound now exclaims that I have a sweet smooth tone. The reliability has been great since then. I'll give a 7 here only because of that fateful gig.

Customer Support : 10
Bob is a great guy. He offered to pay for shipping and get my pedal back to me the next day..... I love the pedal too much to let go for even that long.

Overall Rating : 10
I play a wide variety of styles... Jazz, Funk, R&B, Country, WorldBeat, Fusion, Rock, Latin (I stay away from heavy metal and the likes usually). This pedal is perfect for what I do.
I have been playing guitar for 17 years, and am really actually a bass player by nature and own mostly bass gear. If stolen, I would run (not walk) and get a new one. This thing smokes my Modded TS-9.
If you are looking for that smooth sustainy sound (especially for a strat), check this thing out.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $120
Submitted 05/12/2000 at 12:37am by Troy D. Jacobson
Email: tpjacobson at juno<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
Very easy to use, even without the manual. A number of useful sounds with different settings.

Sound Quality : 10
I love the combination of Compression/Phat Overdrive! The Compression side helps mellow out my clean sound and the Overdrive side gives me a warm growl for a bit of an edge. Love it!! Just what I need for Alternative/Rock/Mellow Contemporary Worship music.

Set up is like this:
G&L Legacy Strat
into
Route 66 (using that tone delivery thing, ya know...)
into
Purple Bud Wah
into
Boss DS-1 (for midrangy, fuzzy, crunch)
into
DOD FX 90 Analog Delay (for warm, bouncy, slap-back)
into
Boss TU-2 Tuner
into
Peavey (I heard that cringe) Delta Blues (30w tube) with a 1x15.

Can't leave home without it!!

Reliability : 10
Groovy so far...

Customer Support : No Opinion
Couldn't tell ya, yet... hope I don't need to find out. But, I do love the way the company seems to be run! And I think their website is excellent! Please GET US THAT CHORUS/DELAY PEDAL QUICKLY!!

(PS if you guys need anyone to demo a prototype or anything....:)

Overall Rating : 10
I love it... I wish I could afford the J&H model too, with the soon-coming Chorus/Delay pedal, but, alas, I'm a mere youth pastor with limited cashola (like everyone else I'd imagine).

The Route 66 is just what I needed for leading our Jr. High worship team in contemporary worship. Warm, round, phat, and with an edge when I need it. Thank you so much for the sweet deal!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: 109 (Sterling)
Submitted 05/07/2000 at 07:09am by NTP
Email: none

Ease of Use : 10
Easy to use and hard to get a bad sound.

Sound Quality : 9
Strat > Rt 66 > Fender Twin Amp. I have the compressor gain at guitar signal level (I already have a clean boost on my amp) and the overdrive volume a little higher, which means that both knobs are BARELY ON. Set up like this, of course the pedal is NOT noisy at all. I leave the compressor on all the time, which squashes the dynamics and smooths out my attack. The compressor 'pops' on the attack if the sustain is set high. The overdrive is simply the best I've tried - smooth and sustaining, with higher gain than I expected. Even at very low volume through a practise amp, the overdrive sounds fantastic. The bass boost fattens up single coils nicely.

Reliability : No Opinion
Hard to say, but the black labelling scuffs very easily.

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

Overall Rating : 9
Being picky, I have to say this pedal is an ugly-looking beast and, to my mind, oddly designed. A square or rectangular shape would have made the pedal more stable and less likely to flip over when stomping on. Also I'd have preferred the compressor on the left-hand side with the green LED, and what's the overdrive bass boost switch doing on the compressor side? The main thing is the sound, though, and this thing definitely delivers. Although not an issue for me, as I have the compressor on all the time, I feel such a quality pedal really ought to have true bypass.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 04/21/2000 at 12:38pm by Will Little
Email: wfl2<at>lehigh dot edu

Ease of Use : No Opinion

Sound Quality : 10
This is a follow up post to my earlier post. Since I posted earlier I got my ts9 modded to 808 specs and some other new additions to my line up.
I know have a 1971 SF Twin Reverb (no master volume) and let me tell you the difference between tubes and solid state is the difference between night and day.
I run my setup like this:
60s strat>Teese RMC3 wah >MXR loop selector > Route 66 > Line 6 DL4 > Twin Reverb.
The Ts9 is in the loop selector so it comes before the route 66 but is taken out of the chain when I don't use it.
I leave the compression of the Route 66 on all the time I like having my signal remain constant and I like the compressed tones I get. I use the ts9 for light and medium crunch, mostly rhythm work and some lead work. I use the OD on the route 66 for heavier OD.
The main thing I do is turn the two on together. with the compressor it keeps everyhgin pretty level and I don't have either of the OD's set to extreme settings. The result is a thick full long lasting OD. I can hold a note sustaining for 8 measures or more, without having it thin out. (And this is on a strat!)
Putting the Ts9 and Route 66 side by side, the Route 66 nails the Ts9 tone no problem, but that's only the begining. The tone of a ts9 with drive at 10 is at about 6 or 7 on the route 66, so you can keep adding more gain to get a much fuller robust OD (the bass boost also helps in this department)
I'm very satisfied with my setup, I really can't pick favorites among the two pedals because they each have their respective uses in my setup. And the combination of the two gives me the thick never ending sustain I always dreamed of.
5 months down the road and I'm still 100% satisfied with this pedal.

Reliability : 10
I have used this thing on several gigs now and it has never failed me.

Customer Support : 10
After my first review I got a very nice email from the boys at VS, it's nice to know that they're looking after their customers and doing everything they can to keep them happy.

Overall Rating : 10


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $119 new
Submitted 04/18/2000 at 06:20pm by Craig Ramseur
Email: cram<at>panix dot com

Ease of Use : 10
Simply put, one side is overdrive, the other is compression. Three knobs per side (OD = drive, tone, volume....Comp = sustain, tone, gain). Oh yeah, there's also a bass boost switch. It has 2 step switches so you can turn on OD, Comp or both. Easy. It comes with suggested settings, but I didn't use them, it was very easy to get great sounds out of it.

Sound Quality : 10
My rig is 1981 Gibson 335, 1991 Am. Tele, 1981 Gibson Victory MVX into a 1977 Fender Pro Reverb (70 watts). This thing sounds great. The compression is very clean and clear. Using this you can nail Cropper and SRV tones, you know the big fat assed clean sound. The overdrive is modeled after a Tubescreamer (which I have never played through, or heard live that I know of) and sounds GREAT. The bonus is that both effects can be combined for really great results. I also have a Boss Blues Driver, Vox Valve-Tone, and a Marshall Edward the Compressor pedal. This thing eats all three of them alive.

Reliability : 9
Steel case...seems sturdy enough.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Unknown, but they have a toll free phone number and website.

Overall Rating : 10
I have been studying guitar for 2 years, playing mostly blues and classic rock. I'm no expert or virtuoso. I love this thing. I decided this year to pay money for quality gear rather that wasting $ searching for low cost fixes that weren't quite right. This is worth every penny. If it were lost/stolen I'd buy another immediately. I compared it to the Z Vex Super Hard-On, and the clean boost was it's equal, but the 66 adds this great overdrive and costs less. I wanted to try a Klon Centaur, and Fulldrive 2 but the store was out. But the fantastic compressor and the low price puts this ahead, right from the start. Get your kicks on Route 66!


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $129.00
Submitted 03/27/2000 at 05:31pm by parenthetical
Email: strummerguy<at>my-Deja dot com

Ease of Use : 7
Pretty easy to use, but when someone is using the two effects together they can easily run into a lot of noise or uncontrolled feedback. This is not a defect, it has to be this way for each effect to have a high range and there is a warning in the manual about it - I'm just giving it this rating because it may not sound great right out of the box. The manual has some good sample settings but it could contain some information about just how the compressor is working (as you turn the knob, are both the threshold and compression ratio affected?).

Sound Quality : 8
I'm using this pedal with a G&L Skyhawk and a Gibson Firebrand SG through a JCM 800 2204, a blackfaced '75 Deluxe Reverb, a Sovtek Mig-50 and an Epiphone Electar Tube 10. I also use it with a Fender Elite P-Bass through the Marshall amp. It sounds great with all the setups and the fat switch really fattens up single coil leads. I compared the overdrive side to a reissue TS9 and it sounds as promised - quite similar but with a little more gain and a little less mid harshness (some people might prefer the brightness of the TS9). Considering that it cost around the same as the TS9 reissue but adds a compressor and useful bass boost, this is a great deal.

I was a bit disappointed that this unit doesn't offer an uncolored clean boost - I was expecting it from the description I saw in a catalogue. The preamp on the compressor side noticeably colors the sound, even when you're not using any compression. On the positive side, though, the color ain't all that bad - it sounds good on my bass when I play it though the Marshall and it really opens up the sound of the Epiphone amp, which is normally fairly boxy.

As long as you're careful to avoid overbearing noise or feedback, the two effects can be combined for beautiful, liquidy, endless sustain leads.

Reliability : 7
The first one I had was defective - it would sometimes turn all the way off when I hit the switch and then, when I hit the switch again, it would come back on with a loud pop. I haven't had any problems with the replacement and the case certainly seems pretty tough. I do use it at shows without a backup, but that might demonstrate my foolishness more than the reliability of the pedal!

Customer Support : 10
As I said above, the first pedal I got was defective so I contacted the company. They were extremely helpful and sent me a new pedal (with money to cover the cost of sending them the defective one) in a couple of days. Bob even called to ask about the particular problems I was having with the pedal! I was very impressed by the customer service and it would definitely make me more likely to buy one of their products in the future.

Overall Rating : 8
I would love to compare this pedal to the Fulldrive or the Barber Tone Pump, but I don't know anyone who has these and I can't afford them, sound unheard. I took a chance on this one (because of the lower price) and I'm glad I did. I would buy another if it were lost or stolen.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $129.99
Submitted 03/13/2000 at 03:18pm by Dave Piccirillo
Email: none

Ease of Use : 8
Pretty easy to get a killer crunch rhythm sound, especially with a good tube amp like a Marshall, but the beauty of this pedal is the tons of subtle shades you can get by combining various amounts of distortion with the compressor.A huge fat lead sound is also a snap,and the "OD bass boost" fattens and rounds out the tone.

Sound Quality : 8
I use a Hamer Special modified with a Duncan Antiquity humbucker straight into a Marshall 30th anniversary 3-channel tube amp. Too much compression with the Rt.66 can get very noisy, like any other compressor. Truthfully, even with the bass boost engaged, the low end is'nt as big as on my straight Marshall. However, the "juicyness" factor really increases as you dial in a sound with just the overdrive side of the pedal. The notes become more liquidy and "tubey" without getting "fizzy" or ratty sounding as some OD pedals can. The compressor side of the pedal really helps my anemic clean sound of my Marshall, making it not so harsh and better able to blend into the mix. Really a good pedal for getting Blink 182 and Lit type sounds. Really meaty.

Reliability : 9
Seems to be very solidly constructed, able to withstand some kicking around on stage. Solid feeling footswitches. Nothing cheap looking or feeling about it.

Customer Support : 10
I thought I had a problem with my pedal initially (which turned out to be something else in MY signal chain) and e-mailed the company about how to get the pedal back. Bob Weil (designer of the pedal) personally e-mailed me back within 12 hours (on a weekend) and told me where to send it. Upon receiving it, he called me after going over it, finding no problems, and suggesting where in my signal chain the problem might be. A great guy, and outstanding customer support.

Overall Rating : 9
If you own a tube amp, this pedal will definitely help your tone. Better than any other OD pedal I've tried/used through my 25+ years of playing. Much fatter and juicier than my old Boss OD2 or ProCo Rat. And much more versatile, too. Great with a clean sound or a dirty sound out of your amp, there's something you'll find to enhance your tone either way. Outstanding.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: Demoed/will buy soon
Submitted 01/30/2000 at 03:28am by Orlando Flores
Email: Tomwaits9 at aol<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
Very simple and very easy to get a good sound out of this pedal. Each channel has many usable sounds and anyone should be able to get some playable tones rights away. The footswitches (there are two) are located close together so you can push both with your foot at the same time if need be. The manual has sample sounds that actually sound good and are a great starting point to exploring and creating many new sounds.

Sound Quality : 9
This guitar pedal is truly superb. No one can argue that you don't get what you pay for and more. I played this pedal through a real 65' twin (with Jensens) and a reissue VOX AC30 with blue speakers. I used a Fender 57' reissue strat and a 62' reissue (both US) since I prefer their overall sound. I tried the overdrive channel by itself and was really impressed. I found the OD to be rich, responsive and very dynamic. It sounded better to me than the overdrive on the Visual Sound Jekyll and Hyde even though they're both modeled after the Ibanez TS808. The overdrive was extremely good, especially for a unit in this price range. I didn't try this unit through a Les Paul but imagine sustain and creaminess would definitely increase dramatically. I also like the fact that there is a bass boost on this pedal that fattens up the OD if need be. Tube screamer and their copies are notorius for being weak on bass response. Not a problem here. The compression on this unit is also good, and can definitely add color and sustain to the overdrive if used together. The compressor is great for chicken picken, soft playing, or for fatting up a good lead tone. I especially like maxing out the OD and cranking up the compression a bit for a huge sound and great feedback. The noise when you combine both parts of the pedal can get out of hand so you'll have to watch your settings unless you can live with it.

Reliability : 10
The RT. 66 is built extremely well and I can see using it on a gig without a back up. The one thing I didn't like is the battery compartment which is really just a minor detail.

Customer Support : 10
I have emailed Bob but missed him when he stopped by my store during his NAMM visits. Bob is always courteous and very willing to talk to you if you have any questions or concerns

Overall Rating : 9
I play and am interested in all styles of music and plan on using this pedal for OD and compression. I can see this pedal being useful to any guitarist who needs an overdrive or compressor. Blues, Rock, Country players will appreciate this pedals versatility and good sound. If this pedal were lost or stolen I would definitely buy it again without hesitation. The overall sound of this pedal will surprise many people, especially given its price. There are some people who have reviewed this pedal and commented on how it doesn't exactly sound like a TS-808. My response is: WHO CARES? This pedal after all is only $169.99 list and is much better than your typical TS-9 or TS-9DLX pedal currently on the market. If you feel the need to pay $200-$300 on an a TS-808 fine. Before you do though, give this pedal a good going over. The RT.66 isn't meant to be an ultra transparent, clean boost pedal of the Fulltone/Klon variety but a great OD/Compressor at a great price. I would say as far as sounds and price go it is also a much better value.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: N/A
Submitted 12/27/1999 at 06:59pm by Jer
Email: jibbs at home<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
The pedal was easy to use, all the knobs operated as marked. I didn't need to read the manual, I just started tweaking away and got what I needed pretty quickly.

Sound Quality : 9
I use the Rt 66 with a variety of guitars. I mostly track rhythm guitars using a Fender 69 RI thinline Tele, cranking the gain on the pedal. I set the amp, a Yamaha/Soldono T50-c, clean when I do this. The distortion never turns to mud, and the full character of the guitar comes through. When tracking lead, I usually play a Fender Strat, modified by me to resemble a Big Apple Strat, with slightly different electronics. Here I use the pedal just for a slight "clean" boost, the amp set for medium high gain. This gives a liquid overdrive type of sound that I like, and consequently use pretty often. Not too much here to complain about, it will get a little noisy when you run both sides of the box at the same time. This is normal when running a compressor after an overdrive stage, and I don't often use it this way anyhow. The other way I run this is to play a Gibson Blueshawk or LP Standard through it using only mild compression, no OD, in the FX loop of the same Yamaha tube amp. I use it this way in my 3 piece blues band as it keeps my level in check and helps me cut through.

Reliability : 10
I do use it without a backup. Heavy gauge steel chassis with what looks like pretty hefty switches. The knobs/pots are far enough away from the switches to avoid getting stomped on.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Never had a reason to contact.

Overall Rating : 10
I play and record mostly rock/metal originals, and have a working blues band as a side project. I've been playing for over 20 years, and never really used any FX at all to speak of. This one, however, does what I need it to do. I have over 12 guitars, Fenders, Gibsons, Charvel, Kramer, Guild, BC Rich. All have a particular "voice" and purpose. My only amp is the Yamaha T50-C, which I use as a combo in the blues project, and a pair of 2x12 cabs, homemade, which I record with. I record in my home midi studio on PC and a Roland VS880, using Cakewalk and a host of midi instruments. If it were stolen I would get another one post-haste. Again, it's probably the only thing that I'll put between the amp and guitar. With the compressor in the FX loop, you still have control of your sound with guitar volume dynamics, while the compressor keeps things punchy.


Product: Visual Sound Route 66
Price Paid: US $119
Submitted 12/11/1999 at 12:13pm by Warren Ervin
Email: astropiper at aol<dot>com

Ease of Use : 10
Easy to start with solid basic tones from the manual, and then branch out on your own. Overdrive has three knobs (Drive, Tone, Vol), compression with three knobs (Sutain, Tone, Gain). No "attack time" control like my old Ibanez CP-9, but I don't think its needed. Boost switch for the OD fattens the low end a bit. One of the best features is the separate footswitches for each effect, which can be stomped individually or together with ease. I like doing rhythm parts with some sweet compressor, then break into leads with the overdrive only with boost: one stomp, very cool.

Sound Quality : 9
Gibson Nighthawk > wah > Route 66 > chorus > delay > modded Yamaha G50-112 II (very loud, very clean amp). This pedal is very quiet except at the extremes (to be expected in an analog compressor). Not true bypass, but has a circuit that actually helps suppress noise down the line (see VS web site) without sucking tone. I've always found in 20 years of working with pedalboards that with good effects, 90% of the noise comes from crappy cables and can usually be improved with a good connector cables and some patient tinkering. Can get excellent SRV, Clapton, and Keaggy tones. Had a TS-9 Tubescreamer I bought new in 1982 that I traded for this plus $: the TS-9 was too thin sounding for a solid state amp. This pedal is fat enough to get the tones I've wanted.

Reliability : 9
Solidly built, very nice quality: love the form factor. Cream colored paint will probably scuff up easily, but I'm careful with my tone babies. Gig without a backup.

Customer Support : No Opinion
Haven't had to deal with them: Pedal is 6 weeks old.

Overall Rating : 10
I play classic rock, electric blues, praise and worship. Have played on and off for 30 years (started with a garage band in 1965 and never looked back ...). Have an Ovation "Josh Smith" 1114-4 classical with a Martin bridge pickup, and an Aria Pro Les Paul Custom copy made in the late 70's that's my humbucking fuzz machine for classis rock tunes. Have some weird tone machines like a Korg "Mr. Multi" wah / double wah / phaser pedal. The Route 66 is the best single pedal I have ever owned (even my vintage Small Clone I bought new in Nashville in 1982 that I used as part of a trade for this, with no regrets). Comparable to any Ibanez tube screamer (I owned one...) or any other tube overdrive, with a compressor that sounds like a Way Huge Saffron Squeeze (way better than my Ibanez CP-9), this is ONE GREAT PEDAL. It's a great tone machine for the music I do.

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