Custom Pedalboards

As electric guitar enthusiasts, we all like our effects pedals. A collection that typically starts with a drive pedal, then maybe a delay, a looper and so on. Eventually we all get to the point where the pedals sitting on the floor are too wieldy and need to be organized and locked down either for transport or simply for our mental sanity, and so begins the search for a pedalboard. After many years and probably a dozen or so pedalboards, I have decided to start making custom boards that fit my need, and maybe yours.

The Flatboard

This board is perfect for the player who wants a clean demo area for making videos, or for an enthusiast who likes to grab a couple pedals off the shelf at random and doesn’t need all of their pedal available at any second. It’s fully carpeted (even the bottom) so that it can be placed on a desk/table without worrying of scratching while also making it Velcro compatible for temporary but solid layout.

Single Level Hinged

When players start to look for a cleaner option, they begin to look at hinged-top pedal boards that let them hide all the power and wiring, but still allows you get in there and make changes easily. These self-contained boards are nice for gigging musicians as well since all the wires are kept safe and secure and you plug into the board itself making multi-amp setups a breeze.

The downsize to these boards comes when you mix in a pedal loop switcher or base mounted power supplies. In this case the large hinged top means having to run long cables to the back of the board then along the bottom of the top to allow the top to open while keeping the cables in place. Custom cabling and small power supplies that can be mounted to the bottom become very important increasing cost.

Two Level Clamshell Hinded

In order to minimize the effect of a hinged top, while still allowing many pedals in a small area, a two level clamshell style board allows for the board to split in the middle meaning shorter cable runs and less chance for noise to creep in. Modular power supplies and custom wiring is still a good idea if using loop switchers, but wiring is a good bit easier to handle.

Ordering a Custom Board

If you’re interested in ordering a custom board, just email me through the contact page with your contact information and what kind of board you’re interested in. A list of pedals and any needs will be discussed so we can get you exactly what you need. Otherwise I will be building more boards in the future and putting them up for sale.

If you want a fully setup board, I can do that too. We can discuss wiring, any additional power supplies, switchers or custom options you would like to see on your dream board.

Chase Bliss Blooper – Can it do normal looping?

From the creative minds of Chase Bliss Audio and Knobs, comes the “Bottomless Looper”, a creative fully featured looping pedal that can even be customized. But how well does it work as a standard looper, and does it’s extra features provide the normal person with enough value to justify the high cost?

As a standard looper, the Blooper has really just one hurdle to get your head around. The length of the loop doesn’t change even though it may seem like it temporarily. Confusing to describe, confusing the first time you do it, not too hard to work around once you know what’s going on. For example, when you slow the playback, it will play the full loop at half speed and an octave down. However if you then try to “record” that effect permanently into the loop it will only record to the length of the original loop, giving you only half of the slower loop. Like I said, confusing to explain, not too bad once you play with it.

So now how about that Repeats knob? Well when you put the pedal in “Add” mode, it takes any filter and re-applies it per repeat. So a slowdown gets even slower each time, a warp gets more warpy each time around, and the volume drops based on the repeats knob. Turning this creative, character-ful looper, into an awesome, customizable delay. Reverse delay, character delay, high-pass filter, dropper; all kinds of things are possible here.

At about $500 new, this is the most expensive looper that I know of for sale, making my previous looper (Pigtronix Infiniti Looper) look down right affordable. As is the case with pretty much all Chase Bliss pedals, it may look overpriced on the surface, but when you start looking at it as a whole it starts to make sense. Midi controlled, super flexible looper, incredible character delay and future upgradability via usb updates, this pedal gives you ton’s of options in a very small package.

Once again Chase Bliss Audio has taken a simple concept and expanded it to be a creative tool that you can get lost in for hours at a time. This is why I have embraced them wholly and built a board pretty much exclusively from their pedals.

Support the channel and buy you own Blooper on Reverb.