Surfy Industries SurfyVibe

The Magnatone amps from the ’60s, incredibly rare and expensive, set the standard for the effect known as vibrato, which was achieved through a component called “varistor,” which is now obsolete.

In their orange SurfyVibe pedal, Swedish builder Surfy Industries recreated the character of the varistors found in a Magnatone 280 amp through a special combination of diodes. The pedal also emulates the amp’s tube sound with a jFET transistor circuit.

The “sweeping” mode (left selection on the toggle switch) adds a feedback path to create a unique effect that is a mix of phaser / chorus / tremolo.

Check out the demo below.

The vintage Magnatone amps were known for having that amazing wobbly sound, from discreet low intensity effects that makes an instrument mix well into the sound of a band, to extreme effects that can take the sound of guitar out of this world! Depending on settings, it can be deeply bluesy, very modern or spooky sounding.

The SurfyVibe circuit is emulating the mono channel of a Magnatone 280. The “sweeping” mode adds a feedback path to create a unique effect that is a mix of phaser / chorus / tremolo.

The original circuit in the Magnatone 280 used a component called “varistor”, a type that has been obsolete for years. This is the reason modern circuits use other techniques to achieve pitch shift.

To get the sound as close to the original as possible, we have found a way to emulate the original circuit. We replace the tubes with jFET transistors and the varistors with special diode arrays.

NO TRUE BYPASS

Is a vintage amplifier true bypass? Changing the tone a little bit is part of the game here and we wanted to keep it so. We did not invent a new effect, our purpose is to allow everybody to enjoy that sound without carrying around a heavy and expensive instrument.