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About This Listing
Everyone loves the warm, smooth, ambient vibe of a Bucket Brigade Device (BBD) analog delay pedal. The Vapor Trail gives you those classic tones but with a TRS insert jack that lets you process the repeats through additional effects to unlock your creativity and redefine what you can do with analog delay.
The Vapor Trail’s natural compression and treble-smoothing characteristics support rather than overpower the dry note… at least until you want to max out the controls to make ray-gun and spaceship noises. A flashing LED in the Delay knob gives you a visual readout of the tempo of your repeats (which range from 15ms to 600ms), and the Mix knob gives you everything from the gentlest hint of a repeat up to a 3dB boost.
The Vapor Trail also has modulation controls to add shimmer and movement to your echoed signal. Use the TRS insert jack to send the wet signal through any other pedal or effect, such as distortion flanger, chorus, envelope filter, or reverb – or use a volume pedal to vary the level of the delayed signal. You can even use it as a wet output to send just the repeats to a separate amp or signal chain.
The Seymour Duncan Vapor Trail analog delay pedal uses classic bucket brigade circuitry with some additional useful features. With traditional controls for Mix, Repeats and Delay, the Vapor Trail also features Rate and Depth knobs to add modulation and a blinking LED in the Delay knob that blinks in time with the rate of the delay. It also offers a TRS wet insert to send the wet signal to other effects, separate the wet and dry signals to two different outputs, or to plug in an expression pedal for hands-free control over the amount of wet signal. The Vapor Trail has been used by such artists as Peter Frampton, Jeff Tweedy of Wilco, Alex Skolnick, Monte Pittman, Oz Noy, Don Alder, Robin Finck of Nine Inch Nails, and Troy VanLeeuwen of Queens of the Stone Age.
Seymour Duncan Vapor Trail Analog Delay Effects Pedal
$179
$179
About This Listing
Everyone loves the warm, smooth, ambient vibe of a Bucket Brigade Device (BBD) analog delay pedal. The Vapor Trail gives you those classic tones but with a TRS insert jack that lets you process the repeats through additional effects to unlock your creativity and redefine what you can do with analog delay.
The Vapor Trail’s natural compression and treble-smoothing characteristics support rather than overpower the dry note… at least until you want to max out the controls to make ray-gun and spaceship noises. A flashing LED in the Delay knob gives you a visual readout of the tempo of your repeats (which range from 15ms to 600ms), and the Mix knob gives you everything from the gentlest hint of a repeat up to a 3dB boost.
The Vapor Trail also has modulation controls to add shimmer and movement to your echoed signal. Use the TRS insert jack to send the wet signal through any other pedal or effect, such as distortion flanger, chorus, envelope filter, or reverb – or use a volume pedal to vary the level of the delayed signal. You can even use it as a wet output to send just the repeats to a separate amp or signal chain.
The Seymour Duncan Vapor Trail analog delay pedal uses classic bucket brigade circuitry with some additional useful features. With traditional controls for Mix, Repeats and Delay, the Vapor Trail also features Rate and Depth knobs to add modulation and a blinking LED in the Delay knob that blinks in time with the rate of the delay. It also offers a TRS wet insert to send the wet signal to other effects, separate the wet and dry signals to two different outputs, or to plug in an expression pedal for hands-free control over the amount of wet signal. The Vapor Trail has been used by such artists as Peter Frampton, Jeff Tweedy of Wilco, Alex Skolnick, Monte Pittman, Oz Noy, Don Alder, Robin Finck of Nine Inch Nails, and Troy VanLeeuwen of Queens of the Stone Age.