Strymon unveils the Fairfax drive pedal and introduces the Series A lineup.]

Strymon unveils the Fairfax drive pedal along with the Series A lineup.]

Strymon has put the equivalent of a vintage 1960s amp in a stomp box with its new Fairfax Class A Output Stage Drive. Inspired by a little-known tube unit from the ‘60s, Fairfax is the first in Strymon’s new line of fully analog pedals dubbed Series A and is available today for $199.

Fairfax is unique in the world of drive and boost pedals in that it’s a full tube amp circuit that’s been miniaturized using only analog components. The inspiration comes from the Herzog tube drive, created in the 1970s by Garnet Amplifiers for Randy Bachman, who was then performing with Bachman-Turner Overdrive. The Canadian group was Bachman’s followup to the Guess Who and recorded popular hits like “Let It Ride,” “You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet” and “Takin’ Care of Business.”

The Fairfax pedal encompasses every element of an amp’s topology, including a tube preamp, a Class A power amp and a proprietary circuit that emulates the saturation characteristics of the output transformer, an integral part of a tube amp’s sound.

(Image credit: Courtesy Strymon)

At the heart of the pedal is an internal power supply that boosts the incoming nine-volt DC power to 40 voltes to deliver a massive amount of headroom that creates the Fairfax’s amp-like sound and feel. Electric guitar tone moves from clean at low Drive settings to full transformer-like saturation as the gain is increased.



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