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Originally Posted by pcjazz
I was going to ship it to Tavo but the postage costs to get it there from where I live (Australia) were astronomical.
I had it repaired locally for less than the shipping cost one-way.
I'm actually not sure exactly went wrong with it - it just stopped working completely, as if something had shorted out.
It wasn't a major problem, that much I do remember. It cost me something like $80 AUD to repair (about $60 USD roughly).
Mine is working OK now, but the LED light for the "grits" section is intermittently failing. Hopefully I don't get any more issues with it!
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11-11-2019 12:25 AM
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Mine is on its way back to Tavo for repair.
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He got mine back about a week ago. On mine the led for the preamp side went out after about four gigs but still worked. Every once in a while you could unplug it and plug it back in and the led would work again. This started happening with the boost side about a month ago and I just kept using it thinking it was just the leds but then the boost side stopped doing anything. I emailed Tavo and he told me to send it back. He mentioned there were some that had bad switches. He probably just got a batch of faulty components which I’m sure is a giant headache for him.
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Same thing happened to mine. The LED just quit working, and the preamp knob along with it. When he got it he said the preamp was working. It still works, but now I have one very bright amber LED and one sort of dim, sort of purplish LED. The colors don't affect the sound AFAICT, so I have no complaints.
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Mine broke, but it was entirely my fault. Something hit it really hard, so bad that one of the switches on top was bashed in and just flopping around, and shorting the thing out.
Tavo was able to fix it in time for a European trip. 15 gigs and one recording session... and it delivered the octal tube tone that I need to be able to sound like "myself". I ended up playing through a Bose L1 Compact system for 10 of those gigs, believe it or not, and it sounded great. Who knew? Otherwise, I played through a Hot Rod Deluxe and a Blues Jr. and it sounded perfect in those contexts as well.
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Originally Posted by campusfive
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I'm using mine with a Quilter 101 Reverb amp. I've tried going through the effects send and bypassing the preamp but even with the volume on the amp dimed and the Barnyard volume up pretty high there's not enough volume coming out of the amp for gigging, which is surprising to me (the amp is 50 watts). Through the input with gain set at 12 o'clock (very clean) there's a lot more volume.
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I also found that to be the case.
Though it still sounds great through the front end of the amp.
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I find that going through the effects return (not the send, that shouldn't work) I get plenty of volume if there is another pedal in the chain, or else use a wireless rig, to bring the signal up to line level. I can put my HOF mini reverb between the Barnyard and the fx return, turn the knob fully off so there is no reverb sent, but the light on, and I get plenty of volume. Using just cables in and out of the Barnyard won't give enough signal level to use the fx loop, you need to get it up to line level, which is what the fx loop needs. Many pedals will do that. You also must have both Barnyard switches on, and the knobs turned up a bit.
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Thanks for the suggestion. Tried it with my Topanga reverb pedal after the JB through the effects loop, unfortunately no change. It's not the JB though, it's the Quilter amp itself. I tried with other pedals with volume maxed and no difference. Interesting that Jonathon had good luck doing this with a Fender tube amp though.
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After playing around with the pedals more today, I find the Barnyard design somewhat strange. Unlike most pedals, its output never reaches line level. It's on the order of the output of a humbucking pickup, more or less, even with everything dimed. It can't drive the power amp sufficiently through the effects loop, not directly into the return, or in the usual loop. However, I can put my Boss GE7 in the path immediately after it, and get line level output even with the pedal off, and get plenty of volume either directly into the effects return or in the loop. I have no idea why the output level is so low, or whether it's a conscious design decision. I know nothing about the Topanga pedal. Some pedals are true bypass and some aren't. The ones with true bypass won't help in this case if they're in bypass, but pedals that are not true bypass will have line level output whether on or off. That's why you don't always want a true bypass pedal. It's a tradeoff. With my HOF Mini, which has true bypass, it has to be turned on before it will have line level output, but the output is there even with the reverb level knob completely off. So it requires that some device that has line level output be present after the Barnyard in order for it to work adequately in the effects loop. A preamp or most pedals will do the job, but it's a pain to have to carry one. So the easiest alternative is to just use the preamp of the guitar amp and ignore the effects loop.
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Originally Posted by campusfive
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Just curious-has anyone tried using the Jr. Barnyard with a solid body guitar like a Tele or Strat?
Wonder how it would change the sound, if at all?
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Originally Posted by Doug B
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I too use mine with a Telecaster - it has Bill Lawrence Micro Coils - it sounds very western swing!
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I use mine with a Tele with Bill Lawrence Noisefree Tele pickups. Not sure it sounds Western Swing-ish but sounds good. Also use it with an archtop with a floating Vintage Vibe CC-style pickup. Sounds good there too.
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Originally Posted by slackandsteel
Humbuckers
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Tavo just has a 35$ discount on all his pedals, so after lurking around for quite a while I finally placed my order, and will soon be part of the Jr. Barnyrad Club.
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A bit disquieted by all the damage reports in here – because in the meantime my Barnyard (powered by 18V) has become my personal life-saver. My 1946 Zephyr sounds downright wonderful but it has been famously unreliable so far, and my tech is playing the very last tricks he has up his (deep) sleeve to make it gig-worthy. And the Barnyard has gotten me good swing tones through all sorts of amps: blackface, jazzkat, acoustic image, local PA, … If it should die, sending it back to Tavo would be über-expensive…
The flipside of the post is that it’s such a great pedal that I can hardly live without it anymore!
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What Power supplies are you guys using?
I recently got my Jr. Barnyard, but there's an incredible amount of hiss that goes with it. Tried two different 9V Power supplies so far, (strymon and harley benton) but the noise won't go away. I Power all my other pedals with them, without any Problems, and tried different pedals in the same setup without any noises.
Kept emailing with Tavo and recorded the noise, he thought it sounds like a Problem with the Power supply. I'll probably be getting a Boss PSA, (that's what Tavo recommended) and hope it's going to work then.
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Originally Posted by Webby
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Sadly the Pedal doesn't take batteries. I'm currently using a strymon wall wart, Tavo meant he also has one of these and they'd be producing the noise. He meant Boss psa should work, so i'll be getting one of those and see how that works.
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Mine is very noisy with a couple of wall warts, but quiet with another. I tend to use a battery, and that is very quiet. I have both a large 9V LiIon battery that is designed as a power supply, and a case that holds a standard 9V battery (I use rechargeables) and connects like a wall wart. Very cheap from ebay. The noisy power supplies are dead quiet with other pedals. The JR Barnyard could stand some proper design, both in this and in other areas, but I'm pretty sure it won't get it.
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huh? Mine's one of the earlier ones that can handle 18v, so I just use a dunlop one, but I've also used a standard dunlop 9v one with no problems.
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I don't know exactly what the deal is, but mine is unusably noisy with all but one of my power supplies. It ranges from a loud buzz to warbling. None of my other pedals are noisy with any of the power supplies. And don't even think of using a daisychain. That isn't a big issue with me, because I don't use many pedals, but the JR Barnyard does not like being connected to other pedals. At all.
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