Rainger FX Pull Focus
Brands:
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HUGE ANALOG DISTORTION SOUNDS - WITH ACTIVE SUSTAIN!
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DEEP LOWS, SEARING HIGHS
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REVERB OR CHORUS EFFECT FADES IN
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ADJUSTABLE FADE-IN TIME
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ORIGINAL AND VERY INTUITIVE
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CONTROLLABLE AMOUNT OF REVERB
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CHORUS SPEED ADJUSTABLE
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BUILT-IN NOISE GATE
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CUSTOM KNOBS AND ENCLOSURE
The Pull Focus is a high gain distortion pedal, with either a reverb or chorus effect fading in after a short while.
The distortion is all analog, the reverb, chorus and the fade-in are all digital.
Plus there’s a noise gate too, which unobtrusively keeps the pedal silent when you’re not playing.
It’s very intuitive and fun to use!
It’s a multi-effects pedal, of a very particular kind….
Distortion
The distortion is made from Rainger's favourite overdrive circuit (from Reverb-X, El Distorto etc), but going into the back end of the Tonebender circuit that they made for Colorsound - when they did their collaboration on their Freakenbender pedal a while back.
Rainger worked hard to make it as balanced, versatile, powerful and silent as possible, ending up with an incredibly satisfying sound. Full-range, not very scooped, tonally.
There are ‘volume’, ‘tone’, and ‘gain’ controls - the gain goes from a loose, mild overdrive up to a massive chunky sound - through to a tiny hint of sag.
Fade In
Developed originally for the Break Box pedal, the Pull Focus has the same delayed fade-in for the chorus or reverb effect - but with an adjustable fade-in ramp; with the ‘ramp’ knob fully CCW the effect is in all the time, but as you start to turn it the effect takes a short while (less than a second?) to appear after the pick attack. As you turn it more, this delay time gradually increases - to around four seconds maximum, until at fully CW it never actually comes in at all, ie if you only want distortion you can turn off that effect totally.
Chorus Or Reverb
The chorus is deep (modulated signal equal to unmodulated), and only rate-adjustable, with a very wide range of speeds available - from the ‘effect’ knob. Great for shimmery sustaining chords, or a double-tracking effect. It goes from a very slow twist (think Jane’s Addiction/Smashing Pumpkins?) through a mid-speed obvious modulation (Bowie’s ‘Lodger’?) up to a fast psychotic wobble (Devo? Spongebob/Peewee Herman??)
The ‘effect’ knob is dual-purpose; press the ‘effect’ switch and the chorus sound is replaced by a spectacular digital reverb effect, which - turning the knob - goes from a subtle, small room/almost not there, right up to a hall reverb - and tons of it!
So with lots of short notes (eg fast soloing) the guitar is totally dry all the time, but intense and powerfully distorted. But play a long note or chord and the reverb blooms into a huge spatial thing; all your long bent notes automatically grow into epic, swooping sounds, full of emotion and with the ambience of a big space! It’s incredibly dynamic to play through!
However with the next note you play it dramatically snaps off hard - back to a totally dry distortion - close, and focussed…
So the listener’s attention is drawn from up-close and in-your-face to a more distant reverbed sound - and then back; just as in film-making, a ‘pull focus’ leads the viewers attention from a face close by (a further-away face being blurred) to a face further away (the close-by one now being blurred).
The Pull Focus pedal is a very ‘3D’ effect, your guitar automatically moving from near to far away in an original and exciting way.
Active Sustain
This fading-in of the secondary effect is actually ‘active sustain’; you feel a definite increase in your guitar signal level - as opposed to the usual dying away.
On the chorus setting this feels like a churning wave coming from behind to lift you forwards.
With reverb it’s a monster growing out of your guitar!
There’s an on/off status LED, plus a large ‘ramp’ LED - which gives a visual indication of what’s going on sonically.
There’s a ‘sens.’ switch - adjusting sensitivity of the gate and pick detection circuits - to ensure they work great whatever kind of instrument output you’re using.
It’s true bypass, has custom-designed knobs, and is housed in another deeply cool Rainger FX custom enclosure. Desk-style, a slight flare to it, and symmetrical - to help all our OCD musician friends.
It’s been developed from RFX's Break Box pedal - but without the vinyl scratch, and with a reverb option