

Electron Brothers Brass Knuckle - High-Voltage All-Tube Overdrive
The Brass Knuckle uses an all-tube signal path to create the harmonically rich overdrive tones only tubes can.
CLASSICALLY VERSATILE
Although based on the much-revered British amps from the late 60s to early 80s, the circuit has been modified to create everything from classic-styled crunch to searing saturated lead tones, all dripping with pleasing harmonics. This pedal does not âclean upâ in the traditional sense, rather it is âdrivenâ from the get go and responds beautifully to the playerâs touch on low to mid gain settings whilst retaining harmonic content. You could say itâs always just a little angry, but can be tamed by anyone willing to explore different guitar volume settings. Of course, itâs always ready to explode back to life as soon as pick attack and/or guitar volume is increased.
AUTHENTIC TUBE AMP TOPOLOGY
An internal voltage multiplier provides 290 VDC allowing the tubes to be biased as they would in a typical guitar preamp section. In fact, apart from special circuit design aimed at making the output suitable for pedal boards, thatâs precisely what the Brass Knuckle is â an all-tube preamp.
PLAYS WELL WITH OTHERS
Being a real tube amp front end, it loves being slammed by your favourite boost or drive pedal!
Itâs friendly to others, though, with an output section designed to work well with most pedals. The Brass Knuckle makes a great addition to any ampless rig as well, so thereâs no need to sacrifice any of that wonderful tube amp feel just because youâre going direct.
As with any situation, wherever long cable runs are involved we advocate for the use of a good buffer to ensure all the carefully crafted tone makes it from your board to your amp.
THE CONTROLS
Letâs start with the Tone Stack.
Based on a typical guitar Treble-Middle-Bass (TMB) tone stack, but optimised for pedal outputs, the tone controls have some of the usual quirks present in their amp counterparts.
High: This control has quite a powerful effect on the overall tone of the pedal. Itâs helpful to think of it a mix control combining treble frequencies with the bass and mid frequencies from those controls before sending it all to the output. The higher this control is set, the less influence changes to the Mid and Bass controls will have, whereas they can tend to overpower the top end when the treble is set low.
Mid: This control has two functions. The first is obvious â it controls the mid frequencies. It also has an effect on the perceived overall loudness of the pedal. Falling into the mix? Donât be scared to wind this control up until you pop out like you deserve to!
Low: This control is deliberately more subtle in this circuit than it might be in a complete amp circuit. More a trimmer for low frequencies than a fully-fledged Bass control. Higher gain settings will accentuate the bass controlâs influence, so be careful that the nice, fat tones donât turn boomy!
Loud Knobs
Gain: This control adjusts how much signal is pushed from the input gain stage to the subsequent gain stages. You will find good levels of harmonically rich overdrive available at low settings, with saturation increasing as you turn the knob to the right.
Turning the gain knob down to lower settings wonât cause the tone to become brittle like it can in some of the amps to which it pays tribute, which is great for gain stacking with other drivesâŠor just wind it up and go it alone â either way you wonât be disappointed.
At higher gain settings there is more overall bass content available, so it is advisable to use the âFatâ and âResponseâ switches to tailor the sound to your liking.
Level: The Level control is reasonably self-explanatory. It adjusts the overall signal at the output (post-gain and post-tonestack). Due to output filtering necessary to work with pedals, this control will cause some darkening of the tone as it is turned down. If the darkening effect is undesirable, just flick the bright switch on and the high-end content will return.
Toggle Switches
Fat switch: This switch progressively increases the bandwidth of boosted frequencies in the first two gain stages. Centre position is the tightest setting and is in the ball park of a hot-rodded plexi type sound. The next two positions add slightly more mid content in each position.
Response switch: This switch changes the response of the tone stack. In effect, it governs the proportion of signal reaching the bass and mid controls. The centre position attenuates bass and mid frequencies and lessens the influence of those controls in comparison to the treble control. Each of the other positions gives the bass and mid controls more influence over the output. This can be useful at lower gain settings, whilst higher gain settings can have quite a lot of low end content if this switch is in position 3 (fully to the left).
Bright switch: This switch allows some upper frequency content to bypass the level control at lower output volume settings if required. If youâre familiar with the bright switch on some vintage American amps or the bright cap in many British stack amps, it does the same thing.The higher the level control setting, the less effect this switch will have. When level is at 100% this switch has no effect on the sound.
Note: Level, tone controls, Response, and Bright switch are all post-gain. Adjusting these will shape the signal which comes out of the gain stage. Gain control and fat switch are within the gain structure and changing them changes the gain structure accordingly.
!!! Safety Notice !!!
Do not open the case unless power has been disconnected for > 45 seconds. The Brass Knuckle contains internal voltages in excess of 250 Volts DC, which can cause serious injury or worse. Only qualified technicians should open the case when necessary. For more information contact [email protected].
| Weight | 0.8 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 22 Ă 16 Ă 10 cm |
| Pedal Dimensions |
11.5 x 11.5 x 6 cm |
| Circuit Type |
All Tube |
| Power Supply Voltage |
12 Volts DC, Centre Negative |
| Current Draw |
600mA |
Original: $349.79
-70%$349.79
$104.94Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The Brass Knuckle uses an all-tube signal path to create the harmonically rich overdrive tones only tubes can.
CLASSICALLY VERSATILE
Although based on the much-revered British amps from the late 60s to early 80s, the circuit has been modified to create everything from classic-styled crunch to searing saturated lead tones, all dripping with pleasing harmonics. This pedal does not âclean upâ in the traditional sense, rather it is âdrivenâ from the get go and responds beautifully to the playerâs touch on low to mid gain settings whilst retaining harmonic content. You could say itâs always just a little angry, but can be tamed by anyone willing to explore different guitar volume settings. Of course, itâs always ready to explode back to life as soon as pick attack and/or guitar volume is increased.
AUTHENTIC TUBE AMP TOPOLOGY
An internal voltage multiplier provides 290 VDC allowing the tubes to be biased as they would in a typical guitar preamp section. In fact, apart from special circuit design aimed at making the output suitable for pedal boards, thatâs precisely what the Brass Knuckle is â an all-tube preamp.
PLAYS WELL WITH OTHERS
Being a real tube amp front end, it loves being slammed by your favourite boost or drive pedal!
Itâs friendly to others, though, with an output section designed to work well with most pedals. The Brass Knuckle makes a great addition to any ampless rig as well, so thereâs no need to sacrifice any of that wonderful tube amp feel just because youâre going direct.
As with any situation, wherever long cable runs are involved we advocate for the use of a good buffer to ensure all the carefully crafted tone makes it from your board to your amp.
THE CONTROLS
Letâs start with the Tone Stack.
Based on a typical guitar Treble-Middle-Bass (TMB) tone stack, but optimised for pedal outputs, the tone controls have some of the usual quirks present in their amp counterparts.
High: This control has quite a powerful effect on the overall tone of the pedal. Itâs helpful to think of it a mix control combining treble frequencies with the bass and mid frequencies from those controls before sending it all to the output. The higher this control is set, the less influence changes to the Mid and Bass controls will have, whereas they can tend to overpower the top end when the treble is set low.
Mid: This control has two functions. The first is obvious â it controls the mid frequencies. It also has an effect on the perceived overall loudness of the pedal. Falling into the mix? Donât be scared to wind this control up until you pop out like you deserve to!
Low: This control is deliberately more subtle in this circuit than it might be in a complete amp circuit. More a trimmer for low frequencies than a fully-fledged Bass control. Higher gain settings will accentuate the bass controlâs influence, so be careful that the nice, fat tones donât turn boomy!
Loud Knobs
Gain: This control adjusts how much signal is pushed from the input gain stage to the subsequent gain stages. You will find good levels of harmonically rich overdrive available at low settings, with saturation increasing as you turn the knob to the right.
Turning the gain knob down to lower settings wonât cause the tone to become brittle like it can in some of the amps to which it pays tribute, which is great for gain stacking with other drivesâŠor just wind it up and go it alone â either way you wonât be disappointed.
At higher gain settings there is more overall bass content available, so it is advisable to use the âFatâ and âResponseâ switches to tailor the sound to your liking.
Level: The Level control is reasonably self-explanatory. It adjusts the overall signal at the output (post-gain and post-tonestack). Due to output filtering necessary to work with pedals, this control will cause some darkening of the tone as it is turned down. If the darkening effect is undesirable, just flick the bright switch on and the high-end content will return.
Toggle Switches
Fat switch: This switch progressively increases the bandwidth of boosted frequencies in the first two gain stages. Centre position is the tightest setting and is in the ball park of a hot-rodded plexi type sound. The next two positions add slightly more mid content in each position.
Response switch: This switch changes the response of the tone stack. In effect, it governs the proportion of signal reaching the bass and mid controls. The centre position attenuates bass and mid frequencies and lessens the influence of those controls in comparison to the treble control. Each of the other positions gives the bass and mid controls more influence over the output. This can be useful at lower gain settings, whilst higher gain settings can have quite a lot of low end content if this switch is in position 3 (fully to the left).
Bright switch: This switch allows some upper frequency content to bypass the level control at lower output volume settings if required. If youâre familiar with the bright switch on some vintage American amps or the bright cap in many British stack amps, it does the same thing.The higher the level control setting, the less effect this switch will have. When level is at 100% this switch has no effect on the sound.
Note: Level, tone controls, Response, and Bright switch are all post-gain. Adjusting these will shape the signal which comes out of the gain stage. Gain control and fat switch are within the gain structure and changing them changes the gain structure accordingly.
!!! Safety Notice !!!
Do not open the case unless power has been disconnected for > 45 seconds. The Brass Knuckle contains internal voltages in excess of 250 Volts DC, which can cause serious injury or worse. Only qualified technicians should open the case when necessary. For more information contact [email protected].
| Weight | 0.8 kg |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | 22 Ă 16 Ă 10 cm |
| Pedal Dimensions |
11.5 x 11.5 x 6 cm |
| Circuit Type |
All Tube |
| Power Supply Voltage |
12 Volts DC, Centre Negative |
| Current Draw |
600mA |














