Hey, ILFers!
I've got several different pedals in production. There aren't a large number stocked at any time, but it won't take long to get one to you.
Currently we offer:
Thunder Fuzz Cannon: A highly modified Big Muff circuit with a huge tonal range. It's been specifically designed for mids, which any Muff user knows is a problem inherent to the pedal. There is also a 3 way diode selector to change the overall character of the drive. It can go from overdrive to heavy fuzz just by switching the diodes.
Grey Drive: A transparent, yet high gain overdrive/distortion with a buffer designed to keep your signal nice and clean over long signal chains. You can get one with either a single or dual gain setup. A dual version has a footswitch to toggle between a rhythm tone and a lead tone. The single channel version has the same gain range as the high gain of the dual channel.
Hellcat: The Greyscale version of the Rat. Unlike the new production Rats, the Hellcat uses high quality parts and has a diode switch similar to the one in the TFC. This lets you switch between the traditional distortion and a more open (and louder) overdrive. There is also an option for a low gain version.
Mini Fuzz: About as simple as a fuzz can get. It is a silicon-transistor fuzz in a very small box. The only controls are volume and fuzz. I recommend keeping the fuzz on max. Your guitar's volume knob is going to be your best friend with this pedal. It will bring the fuzz down to an overdriven or even clean-ish level. Lowering the fuzz knob will allow you to get a cleaner sound when you roll your guitar down.
Small Echo: A digital delay with analog voicing. What makes this pedal unique is the fine control. On many delay pedals the range of time knob is so wide it can be hard to make a subtle change. The find knob is allows you to make subtler changes in the time in series with the time knob. Put the find control in the middle, adjust the delay time to your approximate place, and dial in the perfect time with the fine knob.
Caligula Ring Mod: Somewhere between a ring modulator and a bit crusher, the Caligula utilizes a single frequency knob to wreak havoc on the notes you play. It works well on any instrument and takes chords just as well as single notes. At lower settings you'll lose clarity, but who ever wanted a ring modulator to behave perfectly? There is carrier signal present, but it is in tune with the freq knob.
***Caligula Rex***: The basic Caligula with the addition of a clean blend.
Big Echo: Essentially the Small Echo combined with a reverb. I can include an oscillation momentary switch if desired. Reverb only has a mix control.
Slaughterhouse Fuzz: 3 knob, silicon fuzz with crazy range. No gain control, just straight fuzz all the time. Tone and Mids knob interact, very extremely at that. You can even dial out all of the frequencies! It is very high gain. It will react to buffers in front (not necessarily bad with humbuckers). Very good for recording as it can really cut into a specific frequency spectrum.
Wah/Filter: Half light-controlled wah, half static-filter. Expression out for a more traditional wah feel. No moving parts to wear out, and best of all it works amazingly with fuzz. No impedance mismatches. Really great for pedals like the Mini Fuzz. Crank the filter for faux single-coil settings with humbuckers. Switch from a fixed wah to a light-controlled wah with an independent footswitch.
If you wish, you can have a clean blend added into any of our pedals. While these effects sound great on their own, sometimes it doesn't hurt to mix a little clean signal in.
This thread will be updated regularly as new pedals are developed.