Hagerman VALVE (tube driven boost sounds amazing) review with demo

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CoolGuitarGear

CoolGuitarGear

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The VALVE is a ‘keep on’ pedal, and Jim Hagerman classifies it as a boost (upward of 20dB), but it is a tone charmer that has overdrive properties. At $129 USD, the VALVE is one of the best bangs for the buck, as it fattens up a Strat, makes humbuckers growl, and simply adds more life and dimension. Moreover, by placing a boost in front of the VALVE, to push its 12AU7 tube even harder, there is a BK Butler pedal effect, as demoed in the final lead section to the intro composition on the accompanying video.



Now, keep in mind that this is a tube-driven pedal with no silicon involved, operating in starved-plate and starved-heater mode (viz., the tube receives adequate voltage, but the plate and grid are starved of higher voltages that would bring them within their intended headroom and total harmonic distortion parameters) and all done on a typical 9VDC power supply (also works with 12V). This configuration has not been successful until now, although others have tried. The Matsumi 12V ValveCaster attempts this, but has limited performance due to not addressing grid current at such a low bias.

I did indicate what it does to a tone in general terms, but insofar as my own experience, I added the Hagerman Valve to two different tube amps (Orange Tiny Terror and the Peavey Classic 20), as well as the Fractal FM3 modeler. Jim Hagerman claims great things with solid state amps, but I did not have access to that platform. Without fail, the results were superb. This full-bandwidth pedal resulted in tube amps sounding thicker and richer; and the FM3 becomes more energized and realistic. Clean signals sounded glassier and vibrant, merely by placing the VALVE’s ‘level’ at parity (about 9:30 o’clock); and once past that level, there is increasing dirt/breakup, and to the point of a classic rock sound (with level cranked full). And yet, the amp still retains its underlying tonal characteristics. Dirty and hi-gain amps mixed very well with the VALVE, and with greater richness, gain and boost at only 10-o’clock, as though modded and super-charged. Of course, you can get a lot more saturated for those creamy, gooey leads by placing the level all the way up for lead solos.

The VALVE is true-bypass and well-built with a heavy aluminum chassis power-coated in black with white lettering/graphics. It comes with a 12AU7 tube, which should be removed during transport, unless you have a protective pedalboard cover/case. Its design permits it to be Velcroed as usual, but also screwed down into a wooden pedalboard or bolted onto a metal unit. As mentioned, it takes both 9VDC and 12VDC power supplies, requiring only 135mA power (150mA if running 12V) via a standard negative-center cable. Other specs include 100k ohm input impedance and 100Hz to 20kHz bandwidth. One caveat is that the VALVE’s level control knob is small, which makes it a bit awkward if changing the level on stage. However, that is where an extra boost comes in handy (such as the Hagerman Boost), i.e., the VALVE can be left on and used to add dimension to rhythms, and then the added Boost engaged for fat leads and that BK Butler effect.
 
Sounds really cool for low gain stuff. I'm hearing a very slow tracking (speed in which the note comes through the unit, then into the amp then out of the speakers), which makes fast soloing difficult. I'd love to hear some fast soloing and chugging to see how it reacts.

I might suggest something to protect the tube. Most people are using their foot to turn it on and off and one wrong bump... boom, that tube is kicked out.
 
Sounds really cool for low gain stuff. I'm hearing a very slow tracking (speed in which the note comes through the unit, then into the amp then out of the speakers), which makes fast soloing difficult. I'd love to hear some fast soloing and chugging to see how it reacts.

I might suggest something to protect the tube. Most people are using their foot to turn it on and off and one wrong bump... boom, that tube is kicked out.
I did put it through a Diezel, albeit low gain (10-o'clock) and it was on the Fractal FM3 and into a DAW. If you're hearing any latency, etc., that would be it. It's not an issue with the pedal. Personally, I don't turn this off... even through my tube amps (Orange Tiny Terror and Peavey Classic 20) it sounds amazing and like something is missing when it's off.
 
Sounds really cool for low gain stuff. I'm hearing a very slow tracking (speed in which the note comes through the unit, then into the amp then out of the speakers), which makes fast soloing difficult. I'd love to hear some fast soloing and chugging to see how it reacts.

I might suggest something to protect the tube. Most people are using their foot to turn it on and off and one wrong bump... boom, that tube is kicked out.
I know it's not much, but if you listen to the final 20 seconds, I go 'out' with something more hi-gain... the gain on the amp is still only about 11-o'clock, but it certainly takes nothing away... find that chug or lead tone and this pedal simply makes it pop more.
 
Clip sounds great man!



I might suggest something to protect the tube. Most people are using their foot to turn it on and off and one wrong bump... boom, that tube is kicked out.


AMT got this right with their "Bricks" series....also doesn't hurt that they sound killer too :love:
 
Here is the VALVE with a solid state Quilter amp:
 
Apologies... I just noticed a 'review' section at the bottom of the forum, if the moderator would like to place it there.
 
To me the valve is much more striking in the 2nd video. I have been considering picking up one of these hagerman pedals, either the valve, phaser, or one of his bigger box full voltage tube pedals.

@CoolGuitarGear do you have a relationship with hagerman?
 
To me the valve is much more striking in the 2nd video. I have been considering picking up one of these hagerman pedals, either the valve, phaser, or one of his bigger box full voltage tube pedals.

@CoolGuitarGear do you have a relationship with hagerman?
No relationship (I do demos on a wide variety of gear, but certainly have a soft spot for Hagerman tone and quality). I got his tube OD based on a recommendation... then his silicon phaser and boost (both full-spectrum and treble boost). His Phaser... fantastic and incredibly 'organic.' Plenty of phasers out there with more bells and whistles, but if you're looking for something 'basic' and sounds like its part of the tone, I recommend it. Not sure if I do it justice, but here is the demo I did for it.
 
No relationship (I do demos on a wide variety of gear, but certainly have a soft spot for Hagerman tone and quality). I got his tube OD based on a recommendation... then his silicon phaser and boost (both full-spectrum and treble boost). His Phaser... fantastic and incredibly 'organic.' Plenty of phasers out there with more bells and whistles, but if you're looking for something 'basic' and sounds like its part of the tone, I recommend it. Not sure if I do it justice, but here is the demo I did for it.

Sounds great. As I am redoing my pedalboards I am hoping I can squeeze one one. I have a retroman univibe and orange box phaser which I like, but don’t use enough. My thought was to put the univibe and orange box on the big board and try to squeeze the hagerman phaser on the small board.
 
Sounds great. As I am redoing my pedalboards I am hoping I can squeeze one one. I have a retroman univibe and orange box phaser which I like, but don’t use enough. My thought was to put the univibe and orange box on the big board and try to squeeze the hagerman phaser on the small board.
The phaser does very much have a vibe feel to it; likely you can kill two birds with that one.
 
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