Topic: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

Hi Guys and girls,

I'm searching for a good bluesy od/boost pedal to go with my rig (lp 58 ri, 62 strat ri and my 65ri deluxe reverb amp)

My only pedals are a fulltone ocd and a peterson tuner.

Ocd is too much od.

Many good words told aboud the ibanez ts808 but how are they different with the maxon od808?

thanks cheers from belgium the land of the beer. smile

2 (edited by Jimi75 2009-10-12 15:26:39)

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

Well I just bought the Maxon OD808 and played my first gig with it last Friday. Playing a LP through it you get a very transparent overdrive. I couldn't tell its sound from the Ibanez TS808, so safe your money. The Maxon does a great job! BUT, be aware that this pedal has not a high gain/overdrive output. It put your initial amp sound under the "magnifying glass", adds a little "cream" but that's about it. You can not compare the drive range with your OCD. If you want your lines to sound defined, if you are looking for an overdrive sound that reacts to your playing dynamics and a pedal that can be easily controlled with your guitar's volume knob, then the MAXON OD808 is the way to go. This pedal sounds also excellent when you push an already overdriven amp with it.

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

OCD has a lot of gain on tap, so why not just drop the gain and volume so it is at edge of breakup? drop the guitar volume go from clean to grunt quite easily...  thats what I do -> es335 -> OCD -> Fenders blues deluxe / Marshall 1974x

OCD is a fab pedal....

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

JohnTB wrote:

OCD has a lot of gain on tap, so why not just drop the gain and volume so it is at edge of breakup? drop the guitar volume go from clean to grunt quite easily...  thats what I do -> es335 -> OCD -> Fenders blues deluxe / Marshall 1974x

OCD is a fab pedal....

That is definitely worth a try. I tried it, too but the OCD sound too sterile with the LP. For my Strat I love the sound of the OCD, for my LP there's nothing better than a Tubescreamer kinda pedal.

5 (edited by JohnTB 2009-10-12 16:07:59)

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

Well I mainly use strats but it seems to make the 335 come to life so I run the 335 with that pedal on all the time... on LP and both settings around 3... plug my strat in and just up the gain to around 4/5.. infact I've been thinking about another just for sheer laziness

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

The overcrowded world of tubescreamers/copies! Man, what a mess. FOR SURE stay away from the Maxon OD808! Almost all Maxon stuff is awesome, especially considering they were the original builders of the Ibanez TS in the eighties. However, that particular pedal is built with EXTREMELY cheap parts and many have had a problem with it's reliability. Even Analogman makes reference to this pedal being of shoddy quality. If you want the added transparency and tamed mids of the 808 circuit, look at Keeley or Analogman for modified versions. They'll make normal tubescreamers sound like kids toys wink

Fender HRD, 2006 Fender American Standard(with every possible upgrade),Marshall JCM2000 Dsl halfstack, Visual Sound Rt. 66, Mi Audio Crunch Box, Boss DD3, Morley Wah, and anything else I can find to feed my obsession!

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

GuitarShogun wrote:

The overcrowded world of tubescreamers/copies! Man, what a mess. FOR SURE stay away from the Maxon OD808! Almost all Maxon stuff is awesome, especially considering they were the original builders of the Ibanez TS in the eighties. However, that particular pedal is built with EXTREMELY cheap parts and many have had a problem with it's reliability. Even Analogman makes reference to this pedal being of shoddy quality. If you want the added transparency and tamed mids of the 808 circuit, look at Keeley or Analogman for modified versions. They'll make normal tubescreamers sound like kids toys wink

Sorry but I have my doubts about your utterance regarding the reliability and stability of the Maxon pedal. First of all most of us forum members are non professional musicians. Playing an Average of 1 gig per month maybe, some more some less. If you do not step on your pedal like an elelfant, it's absolutely sufficient. And if it is mounted on a pedal board that sits in a case it's even more safe. The Maxon has the typical MXR pedal housing and I never heard any comments on the MXRs that support your quote. Furthermore, if the sound is great, and you fear the stability of the housing you can easily transplant the Maxon electronics.

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

Jimi75 wrote:
GuitarShogun wrote:

The overcrowded world of tubescreamers/copies! Man, what a mess. FOR SURE stay away from the Maxon OD808! Almost all Maxon stuff is awesome, especially considering they were the original builders of the Ibanez TS in the eighties. However, that particular pedal is built with EXTREMELY cheap parts and many have had a problem with it's reliability. Even Analogman makes reference to this pedal being of shoddy quality. If you want the added transparency and tamed mids of the 808 circuit, look at Keeley or Analogman for modified versions. They'll make normal tubescreamers sound like kids toys wink

Sorry but I have my doubts about your utterance regarding the reliability and stability of the Maxon pedal. First of all most of us forum members are non professional musicians. Playing an Average of 1 gig per month maybe, some more some less. If you do not step on your pedal like an elelfant, it's absolutely sufficient. And if it is mounted on a pedal board that sits in a case it's even more safe. The Maxon has the typical MXR pedal housing and I never heard any comments on the MXRs that support your quote. Furthermore, if the sound is great, and you fear the stability of the housing you can easily transplant the Maxon electronics.


I've known two players who owned the Maxon OD-808 pedal and sent them back almost immediately for problems with the switch. Analogman(someone who modifies these pedals for living) states,
   "We have worked on the Maxon OD-808 and now offer our 808/SILVER mod for it. The Maxon OD-808 is actually a TS-10 circuit (uses TS9/TS10 output section) so it takes some serious work. The circuit boards are a little fragile, like the 2003+ TS9s, so we have to be very careful so as not to damage them."

It basically uses cheap componenets and a substandard circuit, which obviously will not give this pedal the longevity of other tubescreamers. Don't get me wrong though! I LOVE most Maxon pedals, I currently own an OD-9 and absolutely love it! Basically an improvement on the Ibanez pedal, more transparent and with true bypass. The problem is NOT with the housing, but with the internal components. wink My advice to "Rafke182" is to spend a few extra bucks, and get a pedal that will last a lifetime and not require any mods.

Fender HRD, 2006 Fender American Standard(with every possible upgrade),Marshall JCM2000 Dsl halfstack, Visual Sound Rt. 66, Mi Audio Crunch Box, Boss DD3, Morley Wah, and anything else I can find to feed my obsession!

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

Rafke182 wrote:

I'm searching for a good bluesy od/boost pedal to go with my rig (lp 58 ri, 62 strat ri and my 65ri deluxe reverb amp)

Get the Fulltone Fulldrive-2. http://www.fulltone.com/fd2.asp

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

Joe uses an Ibanez TS808 RI doesn't he?

End of discussion. big_smile

Re: Ibanez ts 808 and the maxon 808

Bluesbreaker wrote:

Get the Fulltone Fulldrive-2. http://www.fulltone.com/fd2.asp

Here here. +1 wink  For less $$$ than a TS808 reissue it can NAIL the original sound and has the very useful added bonus of the "boost" side.  I picked up a used BBE Green Screamer recently for like $30 and it's very close to a TS808 as well.  A little less output and slightly thinner but VERY close.  I remember the stock TS-9 I once had sounded close to a TS808.  I actually like my stock Boss BD-2 for a lot of things over a tubescreamer because it doesn't have that strong midrange hump.  It has a lot more gain on tap too...like a cranked JTM45 type sound.  I'm thinking about getting the Keeley mod though.

'67 and '74 Fender Twin Reverbs, '74 Marshall 1987 lead mkII, Metro Superlead 100. Pedals from TC Electronic, Ibanez, Dunlop, BK Butler, Electro-Harmonix, Fulltone, Maestro/Gibson, Loopmaster switching, VoodooLab, Boss. Gibson and Fender guitars, Dimarzio pickups.