
248 Rock Hill Drive, P.O. Box 760 Rock Hill, NY 12775
Phone/Fax 845-796-3616
Z. Vex
Lo-Fi Loop Junky (Zvex)

Demo Video
| All Z. Vex pedals
are hand painted and hand assembled, and each is unique. The pedal
you purchase may vary in appearance from this stock photo.
$369
Includes UPS Ground Shipping
in Continental U.S.
Buy Now

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| Description: |
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The Lo-Fi Loop Junky is really low fidelity… the recording
of your guitar is filled with hiss, moan, distortion and
warped-record strangeness, but everyone will be able to tell the
loop from your real guitar. Because the processing of your direct
guitar is done with Zvex's bootstrap circuit. With the very highest
impedance circuit Zvex has ever developed (even higher than the super
hard-on circuit) your direct guitar will have detail incomparable
with anything you’ve ever heard. The juxtaposition of your direct
guitar against the smashed, distorted, shimmering/warbling recording
of the loop mechanism will make it clear once and for all who is the
guitarist and what is the machinery.
There are distinct advantages and disadvantages to this tiny,
battery-saving device. You may only record one loop. There is no
sound-on-sound available with this technology for now. But, if you
unplug your cables, take out the battery, and bury it for a hundred
years, the last loop you recorded will still be there when you drag
yourself out of the grave and plug it in for the centennial
resurrection gig. That’s because it uses really bizarre technology
that literally crams analog signals into static digital storage
cells without a-to-d conversion. That’s right… THERE IS NO
ANALOG TO DIGITAL CONVERSION. It’s pure analog storage, just like
the old bucket-brigade technology, for 20 seconds straight. It would
take 25 800ms analog delay pedals to hold the loop that this thing
can play. For those of you who know how an a-to-d converter works: Inside the big fat chip, the voltage
of the analog signal is sampled thousands of times per second and
stored in sample-and-hold cells. The voltages of these individual
cells are transferred using a horrifying silicon machine that
squirts charge (something like a caulk-gun) into digital storage
cells normally designed to hold ones and zeros. When the circuitry
decides that the voltage in the cell is close enough to the sampled
voltage (who can predict?) it moves on to do it again. It’s like
some kind of electronic Russian roulette, where the recording may or
may not be accurate when compared with the original, but at least no
computer ever puts its paws on the signal. Dig? There are no
computers and no a-to-d conversion chips in this pedal!
How
does it sound? Some people compare it to a warped, damaged 45-rpm
record. Some say that the compression is immaculate, while some say
it destroys any concept of the original dynamic. Some say that the
noise is intolerable… some say it’s as precious as snow in the
middle of nowhere. Some people have no taste. Luckily, taste is
not the issue. Your direct guitar will
sound impeccable. The loop may not sound good…
you’ll have to make some adjustments to your concept of “good”
to be sure of that. The loop will be different
from any sampler you’ve heard.
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| What
it does and features it has:
1]
Records up to 20 seconds of your performance.
2] Allows you to initiate and finish a recording at any moment with
a stomp switch, when activated.
3] Begins looping a few thousandths of a second after the record
process is finished.
4] Remembers your loop even when unplugged or with the battery
removed, for up to 100 years.
5] Has true bypass.
6] The true-bypass switch initiates loop playback from the
sample’s beginning at any time.
7] Has vibrato with speed and depth controls, allowing a
vibrato/chorus/Leslie-like shimmer.
8] Has very slow vibrato speed for warped-record effects, to very
fast for jiggly playback.
9] Has real clocked-analog recording with no analog-to-digital
conversion.
10] Records using velvety compression for a smooth organ-like sound.
11] Allows overdriven recording of storage cells using ‘record
level’ control.
12] Has a tone control that rolls off hiss and other annoying
artifacts for burbling, mellow samples.
13] Has hiss! Lots of it! It’s analog, remember, with no
noise-reduction, and it’s lo-fi.
14] Has very limited frequency response. Nothing above 2.6 kHz.
Brick-wall filtering.
15] Has a safety-switch to protect a favorite sample from being
recorded over accidentally.
16] Plays back at any volume, louder than your direct guitar if you
wish.
17] Has a gorgeously transparent guitar preamp built-in to give your
direct guitar a glistening finish.
18] Really small footprint, like a fuzz factory.
19] Draws as little as 2 mA from the battery when in bypass mode,
and about 12 mA when activated.
20] Smells great.
21] Features aliasing artifacts, distortion, hiss, out-of-tune
effects, strange behavior, and long battery life.
22] Allows loop erasure during bypass, resulting in a looping hiss
sample.
23] Never sounds like what you played into it. Always alters the
original tone and dynamics.
24] No learning curve! Five simple knobs, two stomp-switches for
bypass and record, and a safety switch.
25] Has simple LED status indicator. Lights up solid while
recording, blinks once at the end of every loop. Stops in bypass
mode.
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| What
it does NOT do:
1] No
sound-on-sound. No multiple layers, no overdubbing, just one simple
loop.
2] No digital crispness. No dynamic preservation. No high-end detail
except on direct guitar. No hi-fi.
3] No reverse playback. Sorry. the analog
recorder chip won’t play backwards.
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The
controls:
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The
buttons: |
Vol:
loop volume. Gets really loud if you need it.
Tone: cuts noise and distortion. Makes the final sound of the
loop rolled off and organ-like if necessary.
Rec: record volume. You can decide how loud to drive the
recorder… to overdrive if you like.
Depth: vibrato depth. Adjust for the level of pitch twisting
that makes you happy.
Speed: vibrato speed. Adjust for the speed that spins the
sound around in a way that fits the music. |
On
the left: bypass. When you kick this in, the loop starts
playing. When you kick it out, you have true-bypass, pure silence,
just like all other Z.Vex effects.
On
the right: the record switch. Hit this just as you start
recording a new loop. Switch it off on the exact same beat when you
finish recording your loop. If you’ve made a mistake, quickly hit
it twice so you can hear the gentle hiss of nothingness instead of
your bad loop. You can defeat this switch with the safety switch
located between the two vibrato knobs. You will record silence if
you hit the record button while the pedal is true-bypassed.
At
the top right: the safety switch. This tiny switch lets you save
a favorite loop so you won’t accidentally erase it, no matter what
condition you might be in while stumbling over your pedal.
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$369
Includes UPS Ground Shipping
in Continental U.S.
Buy Now

Questions?
Call or e-mail steve@stevesmusiccenter.com.
Prices quoted are subject to change. Quantities may be limited. If you plan to order more than one of this item, please contact us before
ordering to verify availability. Click HERE for Return Policy. |

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