SCOD

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Revision as of 23:38, 15 February 2018 by Zander (talk | contribs) (Lost History)
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Catalinbread SCOD: SuperCharged OverDrive

Controls

General Information

The Catalinbread SCOD was an attempt on the part of Catalinbread to build an emulator for the distortion sound of a cranked Orange amp into a pedal. SCOD is an acronym for Super Charged Overdrive. While this pedal is titled an "overdrive", it definitely falls into the distortion portion of the sonic spectrum.

Catalinbread no longer produces this pedal; it was discontinued sometime around 2011.

We own a custom-made (special color and knobs) SCOD made for us many moons ago. We'll eventually get around to posting a picture of it...

Since these pedals are no longer available, if you should wish to build your own, your best option would probably be to order The Kit, or The PCB from Fuzzdog's Pedal Parts in the UK.

Phase Inversion

???

Pedal Manual

Schematic

None available!

Lost History

This was found on the Revolution Deux blog journal as an old text scrape from the Catalinbread website... As mentioned above, neither this pedal, nor any of the text associated with it are any longer available from Catalinbread.

"SuperCharged OD The audio equivalent of a forced induction high displacement big block make up the heart of the SCOD's "distortion powerplant". It is designed like a tube amp, fine tuned cascaded gain stages cause the distortion, not diodes. We knew we had a winner when it made our 5W 6V6 amp push air like a full stack. This pedal rocks harder than a Heart 8-track in a Hemi Cuda outside of a high school in 1978!

The tone for leads is balanced, focused, and sustains forever. Chords are chunky, tight, and resonant. Turn the GAIN and CONTOUR down for hi-wattage British sounds. Increasing the GAIN brings you into more modern saturation teritories without un-natural compression.Crank the CONTOUR knob and you tighten up the lowend adding resonance of a sealed 4x12.

The SCOD is capable of huge amounts of output and the gain can be down right METAL. Inspite of this the noise level is remarkably low. The distortion is natural without the buzzy "chopping" or "squaring" of your guitar's signal as often associated with high gain and metal pedals. This means you can play chords with your SCOD and not cause bizarre intermodulation.

Don't be surprised to find your daily 30 minute practice session lasting an hour or more with the SCOD. This pedal is truly inspiring."


Additional Sources