
QUICK START GUIDE
We suggest on rst play that you only have the Formula No. 5 plugged in between your guitar and amp – this
will give you the best opportunity to hear the pedal in its truest sense so you can suss what the pedal is giving
you back in terms of harmonic content and dynamic response and feel. Set your amplier up for a nice clean
sound or just on the verge of breakup – the Formula No.5 will take it from there.
CONTROLS
Volume controls overall output volume and is capable of overdriving the
input of your amplier for additional saturation. Having this much output
on tap to boost your amp can eectively give you the same type of ‘chan-
nel volume interaction’ found on the amps when you balance it with the
Gain control.
Tone a simple high pass lter arrangement like on the amps that
decreases in its eect near maximum Gain settings. Goes from smooth and
buttery to extra crispy at full up. Who wants fried chicken? I do!
Gain this control begins where a 5E3-style amp would be with its Volume
on about 3 or so and goes beyond what a typical 5E3 circuit would deliver
gain-wise. If you’ve ever played a real 5E3 you know that it doesn’t really
come alive until you open it up some – clean tones are in there, but you
have to get to them via the guitar’s volume controls. The Formula No.5 is
no dierent.
Humbuckers and higher output single coil pickups will overdrive the
Formula No.5 fairly easily, so if you are playing a guitar with these type
pickups go easy on the Gain control at rst unless you want to channel Neil
Young out of the gate.
Using the Volume and Tone controls to get you close to the base volume and EQ settings of your amp, start with
the Gain control at minimum and gradually bump it up after a few seconds of play - listen for the fat harmonics
that start to inject themselves into the decay of chords or double stops – nice, right? Keep going until you’ve
maxed out the Gain control – a softer, spongier attack or‘sag’is happening now. This is the eect that happens to
a real 5E3 when it’s dimed and the output transformer is begging for mercy. If you play slide or lap steel, you
should really dig this level of juicy saturation.
Okay, back that Gain control o to about 2:00 and let’s try cleaning up the pedal some using your guitar’s volume
control – roll it back to about 7 and listen for the pick attack to tighten up and the compression level to decrease
signicantly. The EQing will change from a prominent greasy midrange to a stringier, more dened bass attack
and a chimey treble response. Perfect for rhythm stu, yeah? Now let’s go for an even cleaner sound by rolling
that guitar volume back to about 4 or 5 – you should have a nice airy clean sound that still has a good lively edge
to it – neck humbuckers sound incredible at these settings. Grant Green tones live here – if you don’t know who
he is shame on you! lol