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For Mooer Audio Repeater, 93 customer reviews collected from 1 e-commerce sites, and the average score is 4.1.

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16.1.2014

This review is for the Mooer TrelicopterI have just downsized and upgraded my pedal set up, I thought I could do without a tremolo and then changed my mind so was inclined towards one of the various mini pedals now on offer - this one and two more expensive USA made ones.I opted for this one based upon features, reviews and yes, price. I am very pleased with it, I like it more than the Boss TR-2 that I had previously, it has a more natural sound and I think it is significantly quieter (in terms of hiss and so on). There is no loss of volume when it is switched on, if anything there is a very slight boost which you can hear if you turn on the pedal with the tremolo depth at zero but when you set the depth for the effect the boost is not noticeable.Exact unity volume for the ears seems to be a tricky thing for tremolo pedals but Mooer seem to have got it right.I haven't owned an optical tremolo before but this seems very natural and amp like, perfect for rootsy music which is what I tend to play although it will also do the thing for that Smiths song if you want it. The bias control seems to take the effect from sine wave to something a bit more choppy, I like it at about 30%. I guess some people won't like those two tiny dials for depth and bias but I am pretty much going to set and forget those so they are fine with me, the compromise of something that takes up so little pedal board space.It seems very well built and solid, very well thought out, even the packaging. Excellent value for money, I wouldn't have been surprised if I tried it in a shop and it was twice the price.
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12.4.2016

To begin with, im very happy with both the Mooer SkyVerb and the service from Dangleberry. Delivery was much quicker than I expected from Dangleberry, especially so close to Easter Holidays, and its always nice to have a few pics thrown in too.As for the Mooer SkyVerb pedal, I am still experimenting some 3 weeks later. I personally love the warmth and depth of the Church setting, and rarely need to move the decay beyond about 10 O Clock on the face. Its a beautifully deep sound that really enhances a clean tone, and coupledwith my DD3 gives another dimension to give a fuller, more complete sound. As for the Studio setting, I can be a bit more generous with the reverb,but I feel anything beyond 2 O clock sounds,too exaggerated. Its great that I can get that bit more reverb on a dirty tone.Im personally not a fan of Plate reverbs, so I really dont experiment too much with this setting. Pedal wise, the dimensions are great. Its that small it will accomodate any board size. Sizewize, its perfect, and lends itself as a space-saver on a larger board, and a must for a compact board too.My only criticism would be the actual decay knob is very loose by default.Its very easy to stamp on the on switch and kick the decay nob up or down a bit. Ive resorted to sticky tape to keep it locked in place, but that might be down to my big clumsy feet. For my first reverb pedal, its a solid 8/10 for ease of use, price, size and durability. Having various modes only extends the usability and shelf life of it, allowing you to tinker and change things up with the flick of a switch.
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25.8.2018

Great vintage-style fuzz. It's got that treble-edge to it that more modern muff-clones lack, and with a bit of setting it gives classic Hendrix-esque tones on single coils, and with a humbucker a fatter but still crisp fuzz. Fuzz effect is balanced, and responsive across all strings, unlike some I've tried which seemed to bias towards bassy mids and wouldn't work on chords very well. This one does fine chords or lead, and I am loving what I'm getting out of it.Germanium transistors in a 9V tip negative feed circuit, (unlike a lot of self-build versions based on original circuits which want tip positive) so it works with standard power supplies. Love it, and by far the best budget vintage fuzz I've found so far.The only reason it would not be 5 star is it could benefit from a tone dial at times, but seriously, that's nit-picking and I can't give it 4.5. This is an excellent budget option, and I would buy it again in an instant.ps note though this is not a big-muff clone. If you want smashing pumpkins and that kind of more gnarly tone, look for silicon transistor versions, and ones with more weighting to the bass end.
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8.2.2016

None of these acoustic simulators will convince a listener in an exposed guitar part, but it works excellently for what I need it to, which is to suggest an acoustic guitar in a live band mix. It has displaced a Boss AC-3 from my board because it is much less noisy than the AC-3. It has less functionality than that AC-3, which also provides A/B switching to route the electric signal to a guitar amp and the "acoustic" emulated signal to the PA.I would point out that the AC-3 provides a line level output for the PA and this pedal only provides an instrument level output, so for best results you will need to put this into your chain with an A/B/Y switch, possibly a boost pedal, and a DI box to the mixing board.Anyway...thats how I am using it and it does the job.Please do not buy this thinking it will make a convincing acoustic guitar sound run in a normal signal chain into a guitar amp, but if you understand its limitations its the best product in this category currently available.
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20.1.2016

A great pedal. I had been considering either this or an MXR Phase 90 for some time. While the MXR is "The original" it has a much larger footprint and IIRC only the expensive ones had a power jack, or the power jack was in the wrong place to conveniently accommodate it on my board, so the Mooer won.From a sound point of view I have tried this along side a friends Phase 90 and, to my ears, there was no difference. The Mooer also has the advantage of the Classic/Modern switch which provides some reduction in impact over the MXR if required. A feature I like a lot.All or the features I have come to expect of Mooer (this is my 3rd Mooer pedal); tiny footprint and rugged casing for relatively small money.A Phaser isn't something I use a great deal,and I have deliberately elected for a compact pedal board, so it uses an appropriate proportion of the available space for the amount I use it.Compared to the MXR I am very happy with my choice.
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10.2.2013

Bought this on a whim, simply because it was so neat and compact. I also own the Ensemble King chorus, and was looking forward to trying this out.3 separate settings from something so small and so cheap is a revelation. Each setting has its own distinctive character- spring reverb and room reverb do what they say on the tin. The shimmer setting is beautiful, reminiscent of the old DigiTech XP300 Space Station. Be careful using chords with it, it suits single notes a lot more... and preferably fairly straightforward keys. Once you start adding 6ths to the mix, it goes a little bit crazy and unsavoury.Pros- small, well-built, easy to use, beautiful damping on the decay knob,great sounds.Cons- no battery input (no issue for me, I use power anyway), shimmer occasionally gets a bit violent.A must-try for anyone after a compact reverb pedal with a subtle difference. You won't be disappointed.
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14.3.2013

Love it!Been striving for the Andy Summers Flange/Chorus sound with my Boss Flanger but never quite getting there. Read quite a few reviews, and watched demo's of this and the real Electronic Mistress. Was tempted to the real thing but it runs at a different voltage, no true bypass, and volume drop swayed me to take a punt on the Mooer.Very happy with the sound options, build quality, although the size is shocking (In a good way as it takes hardly any space on a pedalboard.)It as near to the Electro Harmonix as i need and i have read reviews saying that the original builder of the Mistress helped in the recreation with this pedal. It may not be true, but the sound is lovely warm and sounds analogue.True bypass, no volume drop that i can hear and lush Flanging and Chorus. Plus the filter switch to manually set the Flange. Also half the price of the Electro Harmonix.What is not to like?
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16.5.2013

OK, now this is more like it! A simple-to-use pedal to get those lovely old echo sounds.I used the Mooer Ana Echo for a few gigs and was highly impressed and then tried the MDD1. I bought the MDD1 because it has the old tape echo sound, which is very good indeed and which I need for the music I play, mostly 50's and 60's.Trying to get an old Copicat or Binson is nearly impossible now, this pedal comes very close indeed, and is very compact. Also, being solid state, has none of the vices of the old mechanical units.There are three modes on this pedal, Analogue, Real and Tape Echo. The Anologue echo is similar to the Mooer Ana Echo; the Real echo has an interesting "spacey" sound.For me the Tape Echo is what I was seeking, it has the mild sonic imperfections of an old mechanical unit, without the hassles.A winner.
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6.1.2016

I bought this to link with other Mooer pedals, Reecho, Shimverb, Baby Tuner and Ensemble chorus pedal on my M6 pedal board. Physically, the pedal fits onto the board fine, but because the location of the input is more central on the side of the pedal than with the others, I had a problem getting a ptach lead that fitted properly. Even Mooer patch leads foul, there is no way a straight or "Z" connector will line up properly. In the end I had to buy a low profile patch lead which partially obscured the ground lift switch. Not enough to stop it working, but irritating nonetheless.On the positive side, the pedal does exactly what it should. It has a balanced XLR output and an unbalanced jack output.There is a cabinet simulator switch and a gain selection switch (-20db 0db +20db).
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22.10.2016

This little guy has a lot to offer. I was looking for a budget flanger and came across the eleclady on some review. I've been playing around with this pedal for a month now and I have to say that it has a really nice sound, very close to the electric mistress, for half price and size. And that's something really valuable. The quality/price of this pedal is excellent, and with its micro size it can fit in any pedalboard easily.The case is sturdy and resistant, really nice, no hum/hissing problem at all, no volume drops, and mooer has finally added a white sign on the 2 small knobs (old models were just black,you couldn't see anything...i have an older ensemble king and it's a pain...).Absolutely reccomended if you're looking for a budget or compact size flanger!
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9.5.2013

I am using this into the front end of overdriven Marshall 1W 50th anniversary amps (JMP-1 and JCM-1) to provide a bit of ambience for solos (Gordon Smith --> Delay --> AB box --> Amps). Neither amp has an effect loop so it has been quite a challenge to find a delay that doesn't sound rubbish in this set up (both my Wampler Faux Analog and Boss DD3 failed). This actually sounds really natural and organic in my set up, with a nice natural tail off for repeats, perfect for 70's rock. Whilst the sound is 'warm' like analog delays it is actually much clearer, particularly past 300ms where BBD chips struggle (MXR Carbon Copy owners will probably recognise this). All in all, good value at less than £60,and hardly takes up any space.
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12.3.2018

I had an Electric Mistress back in the 1970s, one of the old 18v versions which took two 9v block batteries. It sounded beautiful, except for the frying bacon, volume drop when the effect was engaged and temperamental footswitch.This tiny little thing gets very, very close to the tone of the original and is, if anything, capable of even more insanity at extreme settings. The Filter switch is great for the classic "Ball bearing rolling down a steel pipe" sounds and, in normal use, the effect goes all the way beautiful, ethereal shimmers to "what the bloody hell is THAT?"There's no noticeable volume drop in use and it's considerably quieter than the original Mistress.A fantastic little box which will see plenty of use.
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14.10.2017

I now have two Mooer pedals, the other being the Black Secret distortion pedal. Having initially been sceptical about this format I have done a 180 and now absolutely love it. In fact, I will almost certainly be buying a couple of other Mooer pedals to split out the modulation effects currently all bundled in a CDR-70 (excellent though that is, I struggle to quickly set and store settings). The Trelicopter gives me exactly the control over tremolo that I was hoping for and I just love the sound. I have it in the effects loop off a Peavey Valvemaster, preceded by delay and followed by reverb. It looks good, appears to be built well and nicely fits on my rather full board!Very happy to recommend this.
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7.2.2018

This is a neat great value pedal. The controls are small when compared to the original ehx pedal. The build standard is very high. There's a feeling of quality around it. This is my first mooer pedal and I am impressed. I am not sure how close it is in reproducing the ehx elect miss version but certainly it's flanger range is considerable ranging from slow subtle phasing typical of Jarre use, to screeching typical of Ultravox use. I use it with a korg ARP odyssey synth to reproduce Ultravox use and that it does flawlessly. I would recommend this pedal to synth heads as modern digital flangers i am yet to see have the same warm tones produced from a true analogue circuit as exists in thispedal.
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24.5.2020

well put together, sturdy and sounds fab...The room and spring reverbs are un-muddly and clear as a bell with the level / color and depth control providing plenty of range..But you bought it for the shimmer didn't you... Yeah me too...The shimmer is pretty cool, adds some great depth and reverberated harmonics... again, the controls are great for getting just the colour you want...But the harmonics and tunefulness are not the quality you're going to get with a Strymon blue sky or even the (wonderful) digitech Polara... so don't expect choirs of ghostly angels... It's a great pedal for the price though, and only really falls short when compared to it's more expensive alternatives.

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