Nice demo ... thanks! The 535Q seems to be the one with the most tweakable quack to me .... the MC404 is on the smooth side but has the best booster ... liked all three.
And with a switchless wah if you want to start playing in the toe down high frequency range you have to go through the entire sweep starting with the heel to get there with a switchless wah.
The MC404 has a lot of controls, could be hard to manage under the keyboard with reduced visibility, but if you can get past that it probably has the most versatility. The 535Q has a lot of versatility as well, and the fact that you can get a lot of range adjustment is pretty important for an instrument with a wide range, altho the fact that the range adjustment is a knob that requires you to reach down and twist it means you can't easily do that on the fly. I used to have an older version for guitar, and I liked the range adjustment knob a lot. The 95Q is a lot easier to step in and out of; if you're using other pedals plus the Rhodes pedal itself, you might like the fact that you don't have to fully depress the pedal to turn it on and off, you can just let it go. It has less versatility tho. Bottom line tho, these kinds of questions don't really have answers, because only you can know what sound you *like*, and nobody can really tell you what that's going to be. You kind of need to try various things; you can demo at music stores, or rent them for a time. If you like a certain musician's sound, ask them what they use, or even just walk up to the front of the stage after a show and take a peek at their pedals. If you play a common style of music, you can ask which wah most people who play that style use, as well. I don't commonly play Rhodes, altho I have played one thru my old 535Q a few times; just giving my perspective since nobody else did.
The 95Q is perfect for what I need and I have had zero problems so far. No noise at all when recording.
Great presentation. Thanks for that, both thumbs up! 👍👍
Nice demo ... thanks!
The 535Q seems to be the one with the most tweakable quack to me .... the MC404 is on the smooth side but has the best booster ... liked all three.
I like the 95Q
535Q and M404 are amazing...
You should have played the same thing on all the pedals so we could tell better.
Why doesn't every wah have auto engage? What's the point of a switch anymore?
It's so you can leave the wah engaged in a fixed position and take your foot off...
Check out the Wahter from Mooer, has 3 modes - only pedal that nails auto engage the best way I've seen!
And with a switchless wah if you want to start playing in the toe down high frequency range you have to go through the entire sweep starting with the heel to get there with a switchless wah.
What settings on the 535Q are most similar to the 95Q?
Good video! Thanks!
I love my MC404! Best wah I've ever owned.
The 95Q was pretty cool too. Kinda miss the auto-engage :(
fanboy
It says a Fender Custom shop but it's a Suhr? I wonder why they wouldn't put that..
I'm torn between the Hendrix JH-1 and the 535. Anyone have some advice? can you get a jh-1 sound on the 535?
im stuck between both which one did you get?
Which model would be most suited with a Fender Rhodes Piano, please?
The MC404 has a lot of controls, could be hard to manage under the keyboard with reduced visibility, but if you can get past that it probably has the most versatility.
The 535Q has a lot of versatility as well, and the fact that you can get a lot of range adjustment is pretty important for an instrument with a wide range, altho the fact that the range adjustment is a knob that requires you to reach down and twist it means you can't easily do that on the fly. I used to have an older version for guitar, and I liked the range adjustment knob a lot.
The 95Q is a lot easier to step in and out of; if you're using other pedals plus the Rhodes pedal itself, you might like the fact that you don't have to fully depress the pedal to turn it on and off, you can just let it go. It has less versatility tho.
Bottom line tho, these kinds of questions don't really have answers, because only you can know what sound you *like*, and nobody can really tell you what that's going to be. You kind of need to try various things; you can demo at music stores, or rent them for a time. If you like a certain musician's sound, ask them what they use, or even just walk up to the front of the stage after a show and take a peek at their pedals. If you play a common style of music, you can ask which wah most people who play that style use, as well.
I don't commonly play Rhodes, altho I have played one thru my old 535Q a few times; just giving my perspective since nobody else did.
Can't beat the Crybaby!
404 самая красивая и самая дорогая, но звучит хуже всех. Мой выбор здесь - 95q !