fuzz effect pedal Electronic Audio Experiments Glaive Op Amp Fuzz Effect Pedal
SKU: 6655450888
fuzz effect pedal

fuzz effect pedal Electronic Audio Experiments Glaive Op Amp Fuzz Effect Pedal

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Description

fuzz effect pedal Electronic Audio Experiments Glaive Op Amp Fuzz Effect PedalSharpened for effective evisceration, the Electronic Audio Experiments Glaive is the most dastardly and formidable drive in the EAE catalog. The Glaive plays with a devilishly dirty profile propelled by a massive op amp fuzz design and bolstered by a robust setup of hi fi settings and controls. Cutting through the noise with, well, a lot of noise, the Glaive is a masterfully done piece for EAE's lineup of dirt devices. When it comes to monstrous drive

Sharpened for effective evisceration, the Electronic Audio Experiments Glaive is the most dastardly and formidable drive in the EAE catalog. The Glaive plays with a devilishly dirty profile propelled by a massive op amp fuzz design and bolstered by a robust setup of hi-fi settings and controls. Cutting through the noise with, well, a lot of noise, the Glaive is a masterfully done piece for EAE's lineup of dirt devices.

When it comes to monstrous drive pedals, EAE has more than a few to their name. The Glaive follows in this tradition but pushes the envelope. At the center of the Glaive is an op-amp fuzz capable of dishing out over 80dB of gain – in essence, mountains of gain, so play responsibly. The op-amp fuzz at hand is then shaped through a number of settings to create a compelling, inspiring effect. First, the Glaive's "Weight" control harnesses the power of an onboard high pass filter as it alters the thickness and attack of the fuzz. Next, "Texture" introduces an analog octave-up at the input of the fuzz circuit with a strong harmonic second manifesting on higher settings.

Two three-way switches compound on the control of this titanic op-amp fuzz. The leftmost toggle controls a tone switch that shapes the high-end signal as it cuts high-end frequencies. On the other toggle, "Squelch," bias and gate behavior are changed as the pedal's gate can be zeroed out, maximized, or placed somewhere in between for different playability for the effect. The Glaive works with a quiet, buffered bypass switch with intelligent momentary/latching footswitching.

As EAE's most disastrous drive effect, the Glaive slices through the noise and gets right to business for players bold enough to take it up.

  • Op amp fuzz effect with up to 80dB of gain
  • Onboard high pass filtering "Weight" control
  • Additional octave up effect "Texture" control
  • Three-way high-end frequency shape toggle
  • Three-way bias and gate control toggle
  • Intelligent momentary/latching buffered bypass footswitching
  • Standard nine-volt DC center negative power operation
Shipping Notes
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Exchange/Return Notes
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  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
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SKU: 6655450888

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Kryptonian
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 3
Sometimes Size Does Matter
Scent: Alpine & Spice, Scent: Alpine & Spice
Let me just get this out of the way now the soap itself smells decent, nothing wrong there. I only wish I got another cent. Not that this one smells bad it’s just it wasn’t my cup of tea. I’m mostly disappointed about the size because I’ve been through this before. The soaps themselves are not big enough to fill out the box as you can spot in some of the pictures and video. I honestly feel like the soap size was different in the pictures of the customer reviews that I saw. Each bar may last me a week and a half and that’s with a soap saver. To be honest, the box that it came in would fit two decent size soaps if they filled out the box.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2025
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Brittany
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
As expected
Scent: vanilla orange
Love the scents of this soap. It's gentle on my skin and leaves me clean, fresh and soft.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2026
S
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Sea Dog (retired)
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
A Comprehensive Balanced History of the Guadalcanal Campaign -- Must Read!
Format: Hardcover
I've read a number of good books on the Guadalcanal campaign, and always thought that "Neptune's Inferno" by Hornfischer was the absolute best. I was wrong. Although Hornfischer does a superb account of the Navy and its travails and triumphs, Inferno doesn't delve deeply into the Marine (and Army) land battles. This book does both. Moreover, it provides a continuous timeline of both, and does so in such a way that the reader better understands both as related actions. For instance, I was never really aware that for the first three and a half months the Americans controlled the seas during daylight, and the Japanese at night (sounds a little like Viet Nam). The November 13 sea battle between Americans and Japanese -- in which US cruisers took on Japanese battleships and two American admirals died -- was in fact a clash of a major last ditch effort by the Japanese to reinforce their troops and destroy Henderson Field, which would have allowed them to control the seas both day and night. By that time there had been multiple bloody battles ashore between the Marines and Japanese, with the balance favoring the Marines, but if the Japanese had wrested control of the airfield and seas that would have been old history. The book includes a good view from the Japanese perspective, and some little known historical tidbets as well, e.g., Guadalcanal received its name from the Spanish home town of a ships officer who accompanied Spanish explorer Don Alvaro Medana, who discovered the island during a 1568 expedition to discover the fabled King Solomon's gold mines. Who knew? :-) Bottom line: I highly recommend this book, both for its balanced coverage of the entire campaign, land and sea, and even more for its integrated narrative -- you know what was taking place (or had taken place) on almost a day-by-day basis, which allows the reader to fully appreciate how actions ashore influenced those at sea, and vice versa. IMO, a must read, even for those who thought (like me) that they knew it all!
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Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2017
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Jeffrey T. Munson
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
The Island Of Death
Format: Hardcover
On August 7th, 1942, American Marines stormed ashore on Guadalcanal. What lay before them was a six-month odyssey of fighting against the best of what the Japanese had to offer. In this fine book, author Joseph Wheelan describes the battle that turned the tide in the Pacific War. The Japanese had started construction of an airfield on Guadalcanal. If completed, Japanese aircraft would be able to harass American convoys and threaten Australia. The Americans seized the airfield and eventually, planes from the Cactus Air Force began attacking the Japanese. Throughout the book, the reader learns about all phases of the Guadalcanal campaign, including the battles of Alligator Creek and Bloody Ridge. On the sea, the Americans and Japanese slugged it out at Savo Island, as well as the great naval battles of November, 1942. Names such as Chesty Puller, John Baslone, "Archie" Vandegrift, Joe Foss, and "Bull" Halsey became household names in the United States. Each side lost many men, ships, and planes, but the tenacity and, finally, the industrial might and the ability to rapidly replace losses, led the Americans to victory. Never again would the Japanese regain the offensive in the Pacific War. "Midnight in the Pacific" is a very good book, and the author has done a good job of describing all of the main points of the battle. Each chapter is broken down into a single month's worth of action, and the narrative is well-written. Highly recommended.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2017
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Laurence J. Rusiecki
Houston, US
★★★★★ 4
Good Narrative History
Format: Hardcover
The account of the Guadalcanal campaign was well-written. It has several good maps but it falls short with the two carrier battles associated with the action. There should have detailed maps for the Battle of the Eastern Solomons and the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands. Aside from this shortcoming, the book provides an excellent, readable history of a crucial confrontation between the US and Japan.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2019

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