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A few weeks ago I posted asking for ideas on what part I needed to fix the contact button on an old DOD stompbox. I eventually called Harman music (who owns DOD) and the were super friendly and just mailed me the part free. I soldered it in and all is well on this 20+ year old little green box. In the meantime I bought another one from someone. They confirmed it was the "green older two knob version" so I figured I'd use one as a spare. Well it arrived and indeed was an older version but it also a metalic green type paint. Different color than my real old one. No big deal I told myself but when I plugged it in I noticed it seemed a little different. I dug out my other original flat green pedals and A/B'd them for about half and hour last night. I often hear the "old two knob fx25 *sounds* better than the current FX25B three knob one). What I discovered is there is pretty obvious difference in the two different "two knob" versions in an of themselves. The flat green one looks like this: http://guitargeek.com/gear/img/dod_fx25.gif This unit sounds amazing with guitar. It is incredibly expressive and sensitive to picking and volume changes. Very juicy and wet. I woudl say this is more "delicate" in it's sound as it picks up almost everything and can be a soft warble or a louder sweep. The metallic green one looks like this: http://www.effectsdatabase.com/model/754/ This unit has more rumbling and low end and is not as sensitive and expressive. It is a bit more "dark" and direct. You have to pick harder to get a similar effect and it sweeps more readily than the older one. It also seems to have a point on the range at about 2-3 o'clock where is opens up dramatically where the other one is a smooth tranistion all around. It does sound very wet as well but is more "raw" if that makes sense. The metallic unit I have is "rev G" on the mother board. I don't know how these compare to the current FX25B which adds a third "blend" knob to the mix. I would guess however that that model has more in common with the metallic later rev than the original flat green unit. Both are nice autowahs certainly and if you're not picky both would probably suit all applications. I'm thinking the older one is perfect for guitar and bass and instruments with more dynamics. The later rev might be more interesting for drum machines or processing samples and such. They are certainly cheap enough used (usually around $25-30 or so) and even new the FX25B is only $40 so they're interesting enough to experiment with. I guess my conclusion is when people say "the newer one isn't as good as the older one" I don't know if that is true or not. Or more accurately *which* older one are they comparing it to. IMO the original all green unit is the "best" sounding and the most playable. It could be the metallic one is the later rev that mutated into the current model and is very similar to it. Well regardless they are all fun and for the $$ can't be beat. I ran both of them together in my mini marshall of course and had waaay more warble than is healthy :) Hope that geeky info helps someone. __________________________________________________________________ HELP WANTED PRODUCTIONS - Http://www.HelpWantedProductions.com "Bringing you the best in Organic Electronic music since we started..." Home of the Unusual Instrument and Recording Gallery with pictures and info of Tube recorders, Omnichords, weird guitars, Casios, and more.