HwaCha Distortion (demo/review)

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BDJohnston

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HwaCha Distortion is a true bypass pedal by the South Korean company Pedal Mob. It derives its name from a weapon described as ‘an arm shooting many arrows at once, used from the 15th through 17th centuries in Chosun (formerly Korea) to fight against Japan and China. You will see this depicted in the background images in the demo below:



The HwaCha Distortion was engineered and based on MESA/Boogie’s V-Twin tube pedal distortion section. It has a very thick and robust mid-range with intricate highs, and although there is excellent bottom end, it remains tight and articulate. This was achieved by filtering out rarely-used low frequencies, and also the top high-end frequencies, which makes the Tone knob act more like a Presence control. In effect, the Tone knob’s entire spectrum is usable, although that would depend on your mix.

Power chords remain clear, and when playing lead, you get those grainy screeches and squeals. This pedal definitely pops in a mix, as it remains smooth, yet gritty with a focused sound pressure you can feel while playing and when listening. Although not a pre-amp, it has amp-like response and sound with its meaty characteristics and percussive response.

Unlike many cheaper made Chinese pedals, the standards and quality of Pedal Mob’s HwaCha is spot on, and for a fantastic price of $72.80 USD through eBay (I address quality of standards in the review I did on the Choir Master Chorus, also by Pedal Mob). Music gear is increasing in price quite dramatically, and so I find Pedal Mob’s offerings a serious consideration if you’re looking for that MESA sound at an unbeatable price.

At a standard pedal size and weight (4x2.8x1.9 inch/101x71x47 mm and 0.45lbs/205g), the HwaCha Distortion is powered by DC9V center-negative with a current draw of 30mA.

https://www.pedalmob.com/pedals
 
I'm actually a little confused - I cannot get them on ebay UK, and ebay.com seems to have one person selling them - he has a feedback score of 53, but no reviews I can find? The korean website doesn't have any links to make it easy for people to buy them? I see a foreign company, with a few youtube videos, with no sales outlets, just a guy in korea selling them? He doesn't accept returns - so clearly not a business seller. They might be great products, but they're not cheap, compared to the Chinese ones, have no warranty, and a dubious and probably slow delivery direct from Korea? I can't even consider getting one here.

Your videos seem the only source of hearing them on the net, but the videos just show you (I assume) playing - no explanation of what the controls do, or showing us what happens when you turn the knobs. I hear distorted guitar - the link to the pedal doing it is not clear. Surely it would be better for you to supply them as the point of contact? As it is, we get directed to a random guy on ebay, in Korea, who won't let you return them if they don't make the right noises?

It is all very strange - their marketing plan is to give them to you for a video, but sell them direct from Korea? Dirt cheap products, that approach makes sense, but not for more expensive kit!
 
I'm actually a little confused - I cannot get them on ebay UK, and ebay.com seems to have one person selling them - he has a feedback score of 53, but no reviews I can find? The korean website doesn't have any links to make it easy for people to buy them? I see a foreign company, with a few youtube videos, with no sales outlets, just a guy in korea selling them? He doesn't accept returns - so clearly not a business seller. They might be great products, but they're not cheap, compared to the Chinese ones, have no warranty, and a dubious and probably slow delivery direct from Korea? I can't even consider getting one here.

Your videos seem the only source of hearing them on the net, but the videos just show you (I assume) playing - no explanation of what the controls do, or showing us what happens when you turn the knobs. I hear distorted guitar - the link to the pedal doing it is not clear. Surely it would be better for you to supply them as the point of contact? As it is, we get directed to a random guy on ebay, in Korea, who won't let you return them if they don't make the right noises?

It is all very strange - their marketing plan is to give them to you for a video, but sell them direct from Korea? Dirt cheap products, that approach makes sense, but not for more expensive kit!
I don't work with the company, so no idea. Not sure if you tried emailing them, but I'll send this information for you, if you like. I'm curious as to the response. No, not as cheap as Chinese stuff, but the Korean stuff uses better guts.
 
It's just odd they're doing such a terrible job at marketing them? Even if it is a great product, if nobody can buy one from their normal suppliers - it's very strange. Mind you, today I asked a Chinese firm for a price on 20 mics, and they responded saying they only supply individuals, suggesting I buy 20, individually? No idea? Maybe the South Korean way is equally odd? It's a lot of work reviewing these products so you would think they'd make buying them easier?
 
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