One of the things that completely pisses me off when I’m gigging is when I reach my foot out to activate a pedal in the back row of my board, and I end up also activating a pedal in the front row. Aiiiyeeee!!! This happened to me recently at a church gig. I was playing a nice, sweet, clean solo, and want to texture my sound a bit by adding some reverb.
To give some background, my reverb pedal (Hardwire RV-7) is the last pedal in my chain and it sits right above my Holy Fire overdrive. Instead of a toggle switch, the RV-7 has a switch plate, and the travel before it actually activates is enough so that I have to really point my toe so I don’t brush my Holy Fire’s knobs or accidentally activate it. Well, in this instance, I did both: I somehow completely dimed the overdrive knob AND activated the pedal. The next note I struck not only startled me, but also startled the prayerful assembly – enough so that some people actually squeaked! Yikes! No doubt, it was a bit embarrassing…
Then today, I got a Twitter alert that a new user called StageTrix was following me, so I went to Twitter to do an exchange follow, and on StageTrix’s site, I saw a Twitter reply from Premiere Guitar. Intrigued, I checked out their site, and was greeted with a solution to my problem: An 18-gauge steel pedal riser that you can use to prop up the second row of your board to make your back row of pedals more easily accessible! What a great freakin’ idea! It’s one of those ideas where you slap your forehead and say, “Now why didn’t I think of that?” 🙂
I had the opportunity to chat with one of the StageTrix guys a few minutes ago to discuss StageTrix’s invention. They’ve apparently been developing it for about a year and a half, and doing prototypes with various musicians. And their reason for building it? Exactly for what I was lamenting just above!
Here are some details from their site:
- Raises the second row of pedals to the perfect height.
- Front, back and side openings enable effective cable routing.
- Premium 18-gauge steel.
- Attaches to board via heavy duty hook-and-loop fastener on base, which holds firm up to 200°F.
- Designed to withstand temperatures of up to 200F without melting, so leaving your pedal board in your vehicle on a summer day won’t result in a gooey mess with all the Velcro peeling off.
- Works with most pedalboards. To be sure, check that you have an extra 1″ of clearance when case is closed. The vast majority do.
If you go to their site, they’re doing a promotion by putting several of these units up for bid on EBay, with a starting bid at a $1.00. These pedals list for $23.99 on their site, so it’s possible that if you get the winning bid, you could get one for significantly less…
Right now, they’re only available through StageTrix, but they should soon be available in stores. I will be getting a review unit within the next week or so, and will do a review.
Hey you might want to check out timonkleinindustries.com . . . . . . . .They make a TRUE BYPASS Loper Switch . .which could also be the answer to your problem. With the looper switch, all your pedals become TRUE Bypass , not to mention they are easy access switches. So . . . you can place your pedals anywhere you want them , and they are all controlled via the switcher. EASY ACCESS Plus TRUE BYPASS !!!! WINNER . . . . BIG TIME TONE . Noticable difference in signal to loss ratio. Anywho . . .Chek EM OUT !! He also is the guitarist for . .HILLSONG UNITED. So he is a musician for a musician. He knows his Stuff. Laters . . . JJAM
Oh , and congrats on the new SAINT !!! Looks Like a winner !!
Thanks, jjam! I’ll check out the switch as well!
While the risers are a great idea, $23.99 is way over priced for one of these. Even with the 11% discount on 4, the 6 I would need for the back row of my pedal board would be more than the pedal board itself.
From what I gathered from those guys, $23.99 will probably not be the final price – it’ll be much lower. They need to find the “sweet spot” pricing.