Ever feel like your amp
doesn’t quite reach the
potential that its formidable
exterior suggests? Or that you
can’t match your bandmates’
volume when you need to?
Sometimes we all need a boost
to the right orbital altitude.
Maxon’s new DB10 Dual
Booster puts a more versatile
and powerful propulsion system
at your disposal. With two distinctly
voiced boost circuits and
20 dB of boost on each, it’s got
color galore and enough gain
to launch you into that perfect
orbit without ruining your tone.
Two Stage Rocket
Maxon made some of the best
effects pedals of the early ’80s—
often in Ibanez livery (perhaps
you’ve heard of the TS808 and
TS9?). Since then, the company
has continued to make prograde,
amazing sounding effects
of exceptional quality, and the
DB10 reflects the same knack
for design and road-ready toughness
that made their original
designs and reissues so desirable.
Sporting a dark green paint
job and white letters, the DB10
has loads of early ’80s charm
with its less-than-subtle nod
to the TS808. Carrying on
Maxon’s reputation for building
nearly indestructible pedals, the
DB10 also gives you the sense
that you could hurl it clear
across a club without putting a
dent in the thing.
Like most boost pedals,
the DB10 has a pretty simple
layout: two level knobs, two
red LED indicators, two
true-bypass footswitches, independent
input/output jacks for
each channel, and a 9V-18V
DC power jack. There’s also a
very solid battery compartment
located on the back. About the
only conceivable complaint
with the design is that cascading
the channels into each other
requires a 1/4" cable that can
increase pedalboard clutter. A
3-way selector switch ser ving
the same function would have
been preferable for some, but
Maxon says this topology was
chosen because it lets you place
a separate distortion pedal in
line between the DB10’s two
boost circuits.
Fuel to Burn
I gave the DB10 a run with
a ’60s Fender Twin Reverb in
the trial-by-fire environs of a
live show and with a Vox AC4
in the studio. In both environments,
I noticed that the
vintage channel is pretty subtle
until cranked. But when you
push it, your amp’s preamp will
really feel the heat, and with
the 20 dB of boost per channel,
this pedal has gain to burn if
you need it. In terms of tone,
the mojo of early Kinks guitar
comes to mind immediately.
And if you push a single-stage
tube amp with the DB10, you
can summon classic and tasty
overdriven tones at volumes
that won’t summon the gendarmes.
It’s almost impossible
not to have a go at the brothers
Davies’ slashing “You Really
Got Me” in this mode.
The clean channel is very
smooth, and while the pedal
is pretty transparent on both
channels, this virtue is especially
apparent on the clean side. This
is a perfect setup for situations
where you really need the punch
to get out in front of a band for
solos or certain phrases, without
altering your tone too much.
The Maxon DB10 is not
just a great preamp booster
for single-stage tube amps
either. It works just about
anywhere in a signal
chain where a little more
gain might be necessary.
However, it’s powerful
enough that it can easily
overwhelm most circuitry,
so it’s important to
remember that a little
can go a long way.
The Verdict
The DB10 isn’t
cheap at nearly 250
bucks, but when
you consider the
rock-solid build
quality, functional
and flexible
design, and
massive amounts of gain, this
pedal is a great value—particularly
if you go to boost a lot
in the course of a set. While
super flexible, the pedal isn’t
always suited to all situations
and players. If you have a solidstate
amp, the muscular gain of
the DB10 can crush the front
end in a most unpleasant fashion.
And if you want a simple
single-channel boost or tend to
rely on heavier distortions, the
DB10 is probably not an ideal
match. But with two beautiful
and very transparent voices—
including a vintage voice that
can move into the realms of
beautiful, harmonic, mid-’60sstyle
amp overdrive—this compact
stompbox is a pedalboard
weapon of enormous potential.