Overdrive

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There's no hard line that separates overdrive from distortion from fuzz. They all kind of hang out in this nebulous world of spillover from a auditory standpoint. If looking at the manner in which the signal is manipulated to get the "clipped signal", it might be easier to arrive at a place where the distinction between the terms makes a difference.

Overdrive, as we understand the definition, is a clipped instrument signal, typically with only one half (the bottom half) of the waveform of the music signal being clipped. This results in only even-order harmonics being generated. Also characterized by a "soft" type of clipping applied to sine wave with the edges of the clipped signal being rounded as opposed to hard-angled (when viewed in an oscilloscope).

Contrast Guide

Overdrive
Minor waveform squaring-and-rounding from over-amplification, Effects usually only applied to one half of a sound's sine wave. Usually only through one or two gain stages.
Distortion
Major waveform squaring-and-rounding from over-amplification. Effects usually applied to both halves of a sound's sine wave. Usually cascaded through multiple gain stages.
Fuzz
Major waveform squaring without rounding due to diode clipping of waveform. Effect applied to both halves of a sound's sine wave. Usually only occurs through a single gain stage.


Overdrive Pedals

  • Maxon OD-9
  • Ibanez TS-9
  • Boss BD-2 Blues Driver
  • Boss SD-1 Super Overdrive

Amps known for Overdrive

  • Fender 5E3 Tweed "Deluxe"
  • Fender 5F1 Tweed "Champ"
  • Fender 5F6A Tweed "Bassman"
  • Marshall JTM-45
  • Marshall JTM-45/100