LOW – HIGH GAIN Overdrive
When you run the pedal into a clean or slightly breaking-up amp, you get an open overdrive sound that can reach into high-gain territory without drifting into extreme distortion. The tone remains clear, structured, and highly articulate, with excellent note definition and cut.
Some users claim that the pedal only works well in front of a distorted amp, but this is not a limitation of the pedal itself. It comes down to how it is used, how it is set up, and the amp configuration.
In front of an already driven amp, the pedal reveals its second major strength, exactly the way Steve Lukather uses it. The sound becomes faster, more focused, and more lead-oriented, adding gain without drastically altering the existing amp tone. The pedal integrates organically into the already working amp, enhancing what is there rather than replacing it.
Steve Lukather:
,I hear you EVERY night, it’s my fave Overdrive / Distortion pedal! I use them (SL-OD, SL-OD Deluxe / SL-OD DLX) in various situations, in the studio, live etc.‘
Steve Lukather has been using my pedals continuously since 2017, both live and in the studio. For him, it is his main overdrive: reliable, full of character, and a permanent part of his sound.
Power Supply: 9V DC – 18V DC:
The pedal can be operated with 9–18V DC. Regardless of the supplied voltage, the internal circuitry remains fully stabilized, ensuring that the fundamental tone does not change.
The standard operating voltage is 9V DC, this is also how Steve Lukather runs the pedal.
A higher voltage is possible, but not necessary.
Higher voltage operation is possible, but not required.
Power Supply Notice:
For noise-free operation, we recommend using a stabilized, well-shielded power supply. Some digital power supplies, especially those with insufficient shielding, may cause hum or high-pitched noise.
When using a multi-output power supply, the outputs should be galvanically isolated from each other.
Any noise issues do not originate from the pedal itself, but are usually caused by an unsuitable power supply or an unfavorable device combination. It is possible that a power supply works perfectly with one pedal but produces noise with another.
If noise occurs, we recommend the following test:
Connect the pedal directly to the amplifier, do not connect a guitar, and power the pedal using a separate power supply. When switching the pedal on, only operation or gain-related switching and control noises should be audible, no hum and no high-pitched noise.
This test is an effective way to check the pedal independently of the rest of the signal chain.