Wah-Wah

Big Ass Wah Thread here for anyone interested in more Wahfulness. :beer

Ah, I've missed that thread.
Thanks for the link.
 
I’ve been through a few of them. Currently my favorite is the Teese RMC10. It has a unique sweep that IMO nails the elusive thing I hear in recordings of vintage Vox wahs.

If I couldn’t have that, the old purple budda bud-wah was a pretty good one too.

D
Yeah the RMC10 is the one for that sound. I went with the 95q as I wanted something a bit more subtle, but when I get the urge for a proper SRV/Jimi wah, I'll order an RMC10
 
I’ve has my 535Q for many years. I love it and it’s built tough. I use it sparingly but it’s great. The only other wah that has caught my attention and only recently is the C.A.E.one. It looks like a serious piece of kit as they say in the backwoods.

  • Hot-rodded wah effects pedal
  • Developed by Dunlop and Bob Bradshaw of Custom Audio Electronics
  • Features dual Fasel inductors with two distinct voices
  • Switch among inductors using the side-mounted kickswitch
  • Built-in MXR MC-401 Boost/LineDriver to add flexibility
  • True hardwire bypass
  • Long-life CTS potentiometer
  • Features internal Q and gain adjustment pots
 
I used to love the old Vox wahs but they have a terrible bypass. I converted several of them to true bypass and swapped out transistors to fix the volume drop they often have when engaged.

Anymore I think I’m more team crybaby though.
 
I’ve has my 535Q for many years. I love it and it’s built tough. I use it sparingly but it’s great. The only other wah that has caught my attention and only recently is the C.A.E.one. It looks like a serious piece of kit as they say in the backwoods.

  • Hot-rodded wah effects pedal
  • Developed by Dunlop and Bob Bradshaw of Custom Audio Electronics
  • Features dual Fasel inductors with two distinct voices
  • Switch among inductors using the side-mounted kickswitch
  • Built-in MXR MC-401 Boost/LineDriver to add flexibility
  • True hardwire bypass
  • Long-life CTS potentiometer
  • Features internal Q and gain adjustment pots


Man, I have tried to love the Wahs to end all Wahs.... but they kind of end up coming up short for me.

I still own a few including the CAE... a Fulltone Clyde Deluxe, and a few Teese RMCs with the bells and
whistles.

Funny how the stupid simple ones end up sounding and feeling the best. To me. :idk
 
I'll never give Kirk shit for wah use, of the 7 songs I've written parts for in the band I'm in, there's wah in all of them. :rofl

A pedalboard wouldn't be complete without a wah pedal and if I've played a good number of shows with that being my only pedal. If I have a delay or a wah I'll never feel naked onstage.

It was definitely Vai that influenced me the most with it, Cantrell right up behind him, then Petrucci and Wylde. @Blix posted a perfect example, between that tune and "For The Love Of God", the vocal-like aspect of it and how it's not really going 'wah' or when it does it's makes sense for it to. It makes the standard guitar tone into something far more dynamic and closer to how we speak and sing. Petrucci's use is pretty similar to Vai's overall. Cantrell and Wylde do the slow filter/Schenker thing and while the vocal-like aspect isn't a part of that, it still adds a dynamic to the guitar that I think makes it more gooder.

I dial in different wahs for different presets, I definitely have a certain sound I'm going for when it comes to recording and the same wah isn't always awesome on every amp. But for live use it's straight up Petrucci wah, in either my FM9 or the actual one. It's such a wide, exaggerated sweep that the guitar almost dissapears in the heel-down position in a mix, but you can definitely hear it and feel it when it's cranked up through an amp in a live setting.
 
A pedalboard wouldn't be complete without a wah pedal and if I've played a good number of shows with that being my only pedal. If I have a delay or a wah I'll never feel naked onstage.

My cover band rig from back in the 90s was a Morley fuzz/wah into a Peavey Rockmaster, into a Morley volume pedal, into a Digitech GSP21 Legend that was used primarily for delay (which I rarely messed with), into a MosValve power amp and a 2x12 cabinet. I could cover any genre of music with that very simple rig.
 
Currently the only wah I have is the CAE MC404, sounds good and it's versatile.
CAE MC404.jpg


I wanted something more traditional so I ordered a Vox V846-HW yesterday, I expect the vox to sound different with different guitars due to not having input/output buffers and having low input impedance it loads passive guitar pickups differently, all the 'problems' pre-90s wahs had plus the psychedelic seagull sounds that buffered wahs can't do.

It's part of my journey towards a 60s-70s gear before opamps chips were used in guitar effects, so a Rangemaster, Fuzz, Wah and some Delay/Echo.
edit: Univibe and Phaser of course, all discrete transistor based.
 
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I wasn't aware he stopped using HIS OWN wah? Just a case of the endorsement running out, I guess? I would imagine he could have a Dunlop sig wah with one phone call, yes?
Everytime this comes up, I like to challenge people to show me ONE photo of his live pedalboard from the past 15 or so years where he's actually using the Morley Bad Horsie wah. I own one and the travel on it is horrendous to say the least.
 
I've always been into wahs because I started playing guitar because of Steve Vai and then almost immediately discovered Metallica. I agreed with everyone here that Steve is perhaps the prime example of tasteful wah use; sometimes I don't even realise he's using it! I get the wah-abuse banter, but I think some of Kirk's wah-based solos are relly well executed and would sound rather boring/soulless without a wah (especially the ones in The Black Album and the Load/Re-Load* era). My favourite wah moment in a guitar solo, however, is in Kreator's song Phantom Antichrist, the lick at the very end that repeats under a wah sweep—simple yet genius! Guitarists in my other favourite bands (Slipknot, Mastodon, Lamb of God) also use a wah here and there, so I've never been averse to it.

I bought the usual Dunlop Crybaby 95Q as my first wah ages ago and it's been a constant companion since then. I also got the standard Crybaby but that doesn't get much use. I've also owned the Morley Bad Horsie which I bought used in 2014-ish. It wasn't very comfortable to treadle and so it has been sitting around somewhere in the house. It sounds cool but the travel is not something I can get used to. The angle is just too steep.

I also have the standard Cryababy mini, the 535Q mini, and the Crybaby Jr. These days, the Crybaby junior is my go-to wah because it is the goldilocks size: not as big and heavy as the usual crybaby, but not as tiny as the ankle-busting mini. Came highly recommended in a rig rundown from Paul Gilbert, who had one on his fly-rig. And it's True Bypass, which is why I prefer to have that over the 95Q these days.

The fractal wah block is pretty good, too, IMO. I have a spring-loaded (like the 95Q) Mission Engineering EP-1, which makes using the Fractal wahs a breeze.


*I think those are the best sounding Metallica albums they ever made, btw. The guitar tones on Load especially are fantastic, even better than the Black Album, IMO.
 
@James Freeman Buddah Budwah is another great one, that was a mainstay on my board for years. Come to think of it that's one pedal I still own that I haven't ever done a demo of.

I've owned the standard crybaby, the 535Q, Vox wah, Carl Martin 2Wah and a Behringer wah. They've each for their own character and they're easy enough to modify too.
 
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