Dobro Simulator

Steel guitar amplifiers, effects, etc.

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Al Risbeck
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Dobro Simulator

Post by Al Risbeck »

What is the most effective dobro simulator for pedal steel ?
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Post by Jack Stanton »

Having owned and used them all, my opinion, for whatever it's worth is the Goodrich Matchbro is the most realistic. Tom Bradshaw's MXR simulator runs a close second. Boss and Dan electro EQ pedals do a more than respectable job for the two times a night you're going to use it
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Dobro simulator

Post by George Kimery »

I would like to make a pretty useless comment, but if you have the time to read such things, then proceed.

I was at Scotty's convention at the Goodrich booth when they were showing the prototype of the Match Bro. At the end of the convention I went over to their booth and told them I wanted to buy the proto-type. They said, look, it's got paper stickers labeling the controls, don't you want to wait until they are in production with the lettering screened on. I said the paper sticker didn't bother me. I said I wanted to be the first one to own one. They said I was 2nd, that Buddy Emmons had the first proto-type.

I liked it just fine. You do need the special plastic bar to get the dobro sound. I only sold it because I was expecting to play the same things dobro players played and to sound exactly like them. I was pretty new to steel at the time and didn't realize I couldn't do that without having the same tuning as a dobro, so I sold it. If I only had known then what I know now, I would never have sold it.
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Jack Hanson
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Re: Dobro simulator

Post by Jack Hanson »

George Kimery wrote:If I only had known then what I know now, I would never have...
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Jack Stoner
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Post by Jack Stoner »

I have an original model MatchBro and a Bradshaw model. They are both good but I give the edge to the original model MatchBro. If my MatchBro dies (again) I will start using the Bradshaw model. But, you have to think "Dobro" when using them, not just use it as another effect.

I've got some short samples. E-mail me and I'll send them to you. Tom Bradshaw has the samples and is going to put them on his web site.
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Post by Michael Hartz »

Al, find an inexpensive Boss GE- 7 graphic Eq pedal and stagger all the sliders and use a plastic bar. This will give you a great dobro tone. That's all Bobbe Seymour's $200 Bo-bro pedal was, he just set the sliders, cut them off and put a decal over the whole thing. Nothing more- I can't remember if you start with the lowest frequency slider (all the way left) all the way down and the next one all the way up and so on. If that doesn't sound right then try it all the way up and the next all the way down etc...
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Post by John Macy »

I own them all, but the built in simulator in the Telonics amp is my favorite...
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Alex Cattaneo
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Post by Alex Cattaneo »

The Fishman Aura Jerry Douglas is meant to be a preamp pedal for dobro, and it's fantastic for that, but it also works amazingly well as a dobro simulator. I use it all the time on steel and also lap steel. You have 14 different presets, or emulations, and they all come from different studio microphones used on an actual dobro. Just put the blend knob to max and voilà! You could put a ukulele in there and it would still sound like a dobro. It's not cheap, but if you play actual dobro live from time to time, it's a solid investment.
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Jon Light
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Post by Jon Light »

Alex Cattaneo wrote:The Fishman Aura Jerry Douglas is meant to be a preamp pedal for dobro, and it's fantastic for that, but it also works amazingly well as a dobro simulator. I use it all the time on steel and also lap steel.....
I've always felt that answers about this exact application have been evasive. I totally get that the unit was designed to be used with a reso-guit with a dedicated, properly installed pickup. But I've never seen a good answer to the question of how well it will work without that pickup, with a different input. The answer is always "it won't give you the excellent results it was designed to produce".
So this is good to know. I am a fan of the Goodrich MatchBro but now I know that this is an option.
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Post by Jay Coover »

Here's a recording I did a while back of my poor beginner playing through a Boss GE-7 with the staggered slider trick into the Jerry Douglas Aura both of which I had for other applications.

I found later that the GE-7 was more or less superfluous and you do not want to cut the highest band. In fact, PSG generally doesn't product much above 5k or so, while a dobro while go all the way up to 20k hertz. There's no real way around that and the Aura pedal doesn't really add it back in. Maybe some sort of exciter then to the Aura pedal. It would be an interesting experiment. This is what it is, but I'm sure it could be made better.

Carter Starter > Boss GE-7 > Fishman Aura Jerry Douglas

https://www.dropbox.com/s/nhls2ep22g9cv ... o.mp3?dl=0
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Erv Niehaus
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Post by Erv Niehaus »

How can a dobro produce higher frequencies than a pedal steel? The tuning isn't that much different along with the scale lengths. :roll:
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Tony Glassman
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Post by Tony Glassman »

I agree with John Macy. The best dobro simulator I’ve ever used is the Telonics amp built-in one. I broke it out on a recent gig and it turned the heads of my bandmates. They couldn’t figure out where the dobro sound was coming for a few seconds.
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Post by Jay Coover »

Erv Niehaus wrote:How can a dobro produce higher frequencies than a pedal steel? The tuning isn't that much different along with the scale lengths. :roll:
Erv
Just the way magnetic pickups work I guess. I've compared the frequency graph of both. Electric guitars don't get much above 5k either. A little but not as much as a real acoustic instrument through a quality mic. While they can produce pretty much the same notes, the frequency content is different. Harmonic overtones, whatever you want to call them.

I didn't make it up. I measured with software. Pretty easy to do.

You won't find many brighter pickups than this one. This isn't my measurement.
Image
Last edited by Jay Coover on 1 Feb 2019 10:13 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Erv Niehaus
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Post by Erv Niehaus »

You mean frequencies only a dog can hear. :roll:
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Post by Jay Coover »

No, those dogs-only frequencies for guys our age are well above 10-12k and you're right they don't matter as much. Between 5k and 12k though is the sparkle of your dobro, acoustic guitar, human voice, etc. It's damned important for getting those types of instruments to sit above the rhythm section (bass, drums, electric guitar) in a mix.

For instruments with magnetic pickups this is the ice pick in the ear range. That might be why it's rolled off. It's not just the pickups that help roll off, but guitar amps and speakers typically roll off around 5k too. Not sure with PSG amps as I don't actually own one.
Last edited by Jay Coover on 4 Feb 2019 9:38 am, edited 5 times in total.
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Post by Jay Coover »

This is Jerry Douglas, solo. As far as the notching, you can see that you need one at about 400 Hz and it's also safe to have a notch at around 100. The Boss GE-7 isn't capable of the right kind of notching up higher I think, but I do know you don't want to drop that top slider on that pedal when you stagger them. In the sound clip I linked to above, I made that mistake. In reality though, that top slider is at 8k and actually doesn't make as much difference up or down as you would think, just because there is little frequency content there to boost or cut from your PSG.

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Mike Perlowin
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Post by Mike Perlowin »

I use a Dunlop Q zone pedal. Dunlop,no longer makes these, but there are always a few for sale on E-bay.

Mine is hard-wired into the powered effects loop in my Steelaire.

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Francesco Porcu
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Pedabro Effect pedal 2023

Post by Francesco Porcu »

Jay Coover wrote:Here's a recording I did a while back of my poor beginner playing through a Boss GE-7 with the staggered slider trick into the Jerry Douglas Aura both of which I had for other applications.

I found later that the GE-7 was more or less superfluous and you do not want to cut the highest band. In fact, PSG generally doesn't product much above 5k or so, while a dobro while go all the way up to 20k hertz. There's no real way around that and the Aura pedal doesn't really add it back in. Maybe some sort of exciter then to the Aura pedal. It would be an interesting experiment. This is what it is, but I'm sure it could be made better.

Carter Starter > Boss GE-7 > Fishman Aura Jerry Douglas

https://www.dropbox.com/s/nhls2ep22g9cv ... o.mp3?dl=0
Hi Jay I'm only now reading this post, I too have the Fishman JD and wanted to use it with the PSG, but I was curious to listen to your file where you test it together with the Boss G7, but the link no longer exists it tells me it's empty, if could you please send it to my email I would be so grateful. Thanks for this Francesco
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Steve Lipsey
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Post by Steve Lipsey »

Years ago this was discussed...and people (including me) found that, on PSG, instead of the somewhat pricey GE-7, just use the Danelectro Fish & Chips EQ pedal....cheaper, and actually sounds more dobro-like when you offset the sliders...I guess lower quality sometimes pays off....

And in another version of this hack, using a bar made from a 1" cheap wood dowel, and not pressing down very hard, makes a dobro sound just like a banjo...once again, perfect for the few times you want to use it. Maybe that plastic bar that was mentioned here would sound similar...

I got tired of carrying so many instruments to the gig....I now have only a custom CooderNator, a thinline dobro with a Fishman and string-through pickup, for both dobro and lap steel, plus my banjo bar...one light case with three instruments in it...
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Ken Byng
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Post by Ken Byng »

John Macy wrote:I own them all, but the built in simulator in the Telonics amp is my favorite...
Me too John!
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Bob Snelgrove
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Post by Bob Snelgrove »

Ken Byng wrote:
John Macy wrote:I own them all, but the built in simulator in the Telonics amp is my favorite...
Me too John!
Sound demos, please?
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