The Butter Booster is my version of the classic Dallas Rangemaster. It features a hand-machined and finished enclosure, durable Switchcraft jacks, and a minimalist PCB layout optimized for low noise and consistency. This design accepts a standard polarity (center negative) DC 9V power adapter, and includes simple voltage regulation to ensure consistent bias and tone regardless of the input voltage. All switching is carefully designed to be pop-free, and this pedal is true bypass.
There are three tone presets, plus both silicon and germanium modes, resulting in six different tone combinations.
Germanium (Ge) has identical gain and bandwidth to the vintage transistor
Silicon (Si) has the same gain, but increased bandwidth for more articulate attack
Traditional (T) is the vintage corner frequency for the original Rangemaster bite
Modern (M) drops this an octave giving added mid-range presence
Baritone (B) is down another octave for extra lows and a deep, chewy growl
This pedal achieves its tone via a single modern-production silicon transistor. In my testing, I found selecting a transistor with the right non-linear gain characteristics to matter much more than whether it is Ge, Si, NPN, or PNP. With the proper component selection, any silicon transistor can be made to sound virtually identical to germanium, although the opposite is not necessarily true. I'm currently working on an article called "Secrets of the Rangemaster", where I intend to go into much greater detail on exactly why this is.
For now, suffice to say that the benefits of silicon are numerous - well-defined gain, low leakage, low noise, low dependence of gain on temperature, and good consistency across batches. I'll confess, even though I know all of these things to be true, I still find Ge to have some mystique. However, mystique is hard to quantify, and I'm here to be scientific! The Butter Booster is designed to deliver optimal and consistent performance, by using reliable modern components to capture vintage tones.