A uniquely voiced overdrive and a special boost that have been custom tuned to Mike Zito’s ear.
Atlanta, GA (May 19, 2017) -- The latest offering from CAST Engineering. The Peace Drive brings you two pedals in one, a uniquely voiced overdrive and a special boost that have been custom tuned to Mike Zito’s ear. This pedal also offers a unique switching system that enables you to put the boost function pre or post overdrive channel.
The Peace Drive gives you a drive section that offers up a delectable range of tone, by way of the level, gain, and tone knobs, which give you the ability to cover almost any musical style. We’ve worked countless hours with Mike to create the sound he hears in his head and we are confident this will please anyone’s taste for tone.
Don’t forget about the boost section that is dripping with magic. With a level and gain knob controlling this side, it does not disappoint. Use it as a standalone boost to send your amp into tonal bliss or stack it before or after the overdrive section by using our unique switching system that uses an LED ring around the button that changes color depending on what order you choose.
This pedal offers up a serious range of overdriven tones that will approach the distortion/fuzz territory when set correctly. The overdrive side has red lit knobs and the boost shines bright with green lit knobs.
Features:
- Two pedal layout – Level, Gain, Tone (overdrive side) Level, Gain (boost side)
- Two Footswitches for the overdrive and boost
- Push Button Switch for the order (light indicates order selected)
- Standard 9v neg tip power supply
- Lifetime warranty
- Designed and hand built in Atlanta, GA
The CAST Engineering Peace Drive is available for $279.99
For more information:
CAST Engineering
Analog feel in a high-headroom digital delay.
Glowing Promise, Hidden Powers
When you click Casper on, the knobs become enshrouded by nebulous baby-blue light. Otherwise, it’s simple as a delay can be: no tap tempo, no LCD screen, and no presets.
The three silver knobs control delay time, repeats, and effect level. Casper’s I/O jacks are mounted on the crown of the box, so you can cram the pedal more easily onto an crowded board.
Removing the backplate enables access to the 9V battery compartment (there’s also a 9V jack on the crown) and the internal feedback sensitivity trimpot. This hidden control, in many ways, shifts the personality between more or less digital. At the full-counterclockwise zero position, the Casper becomes virtually oscillation resistant, enabling you to leverage the unit’s clean, transparent digital voice and create more detailed musical passages at high delay and feedback times. As you twist the trimpot clockwise, Casper starts to feel twitchier, more unhinged, and more like a vintage Ibanez AD9 or Boss DM-2 analog delay, with their touchy, hard-to-nail oscillation thresholds.
Ratings
Pros:
Warm, not-too-sterile clean tones. Cool, glowing controls. Intuitive, manageable control range.
Cons:
Short maximum delay for a digital unit.
Tones:
Ease of Use:
Build/Design:
Value:
Street:
$199
CAST Engineering Casper Delay
cast-engineering.com
Leave the Noise
Casper’s repeats may be clean, but they are not sterile. Repeats are clear, defined, and communicate a lot of detail, and the box is much more transparent and less noisy than analog Boss or Ibanez delays.
Casper’s maximum delay time range is 700 ms, which is relatively short by today’s digital delay standards and comparable to the maximum delay times of modern analog units like the Moog Minifooger and Boss DM-2w. Some players may miss the extra expansive echo times. But the narrower control range makes it much easier to dial in the settings you need on the fly. Slap-back sounds are available with the delay and repeat controls at around 9 o’clock. Turning the delay time control to 1 o’clock generates repeats at about 300 ms—a great starting point for subtle, set-and-forget, Gilmour-stylings—especially when you situate the level in the lower half of its range.
The tweakable oscillation threshold enables a few cool tricks, too. My favorite involved maximizing the oscillation sensitivity, diming the level and repeats, and dialing up a short delay. When you hit a note at these settings and step on the bypass switch, you generate a more-or-less instantaneous wall of self-oscillation, which you can silence dramatically when you hit the bypass switch again.
The Verdict
With 700 ms of available hang time, the Casper is far from the most expansive digital delay. And its simple controls mean a lot of complex delay patterns are off limits. The headroom and transparency, however, are exceptional. The just-right dose of filtering adds near-analog glow to the repeats. And the control set has a very easy-to-navigate analog feel. The result is an approachable delay with plenty of clarity to rise above a dense musical mix.
Classic analog tremolo sounds with 30db of boost.
Atlanta, GA (March 11, 2016) -- The latest offering from CAST Engineering; the Pulse Drive brings you classic analog tremolo sounds and 30db of boost, making this pedal extremely versatile and truly inspiring to play.
This is our enhanced version of the classic Anthony Leo tremolo circuit from the 60s. You can get the slow subtle trem to choppy to classic swampy tones. With 30db of gain on tap, you can take it from crystal clear to gritty trem or turn the depth all the way down and have just a boost/drive to send your amp into sweet overdrive land. A simple pedal with a lot of sounds on board!
Features:
- 3-knob layout – Level, Depth and Rate - all knobs light up and pulse to the rate of the tremolo
- Classic tremolo sounds
- 30db of boost on board to be used alone or mixed with tremolo
- 9V battery or standard 9v neg tip power supply
- Lifetime warranty
- Truly designed and hand built in Atlanta, GA
$179 direct
Watch the company's video demo:
For more information:
Cast Engineering