Double Dragon Lo-Fi Octave Device In a world of perfect digital octaves, we looked backward. The Double Dragon Lo-Fi Octave Device is built on the shoulders of 40–50 year old analog octave divider technology — the same technology that gave us the MXR Blue Box, DOD Octoplus, Boss OC-2, Ibanez OT10, Electro Harmonix Micro-Synth, and other circuits that synth designers helped inspire. Pre-DSP. Pre-precision. All analog warmth. Play single notes and you have a riff machine. Play a chord and the circuit starts to stutter, jump, and fight itself, making something new. It's not trying to replicate you perfectly — it's trying to play along with you. It's alive! The Sound The Double Dragon is an all-analog monophonic octave-down and up effect. The lower octave is the foundation — thick, analog, with the characteristic behavior that made vintage octave circuits legendary. The upper octave is pure bonus: an octave-up distortion that lands somewhere between an Octavia and a Superfuzz. Gritty. Usable. With a mid-range sting that cuts through the mix. Turn on the Double Dragon and you can't help but start playing riffs. Your guitar feels twice the size. You fill out the space that used to need a band. A Milestone In our entire JHS Pedals history, this is our first octave device. We've done octave fuzz, but we never landed on a sub-octave circuit that felt at home in our brand — until now. Weird, wild, and lo-fi. We're glad we waited to get it right. Who’s It For? For riff lov

ConditionBrand New (New)
Brand New items are sold by an authorized dealer or original builder and include all original packaging.Learn more
Brand
Model
  • Double Dragon Lo-Fi Octave Device
Finish
  • Dragon
Categories
Pedal Format
  • Standard

Product safety information may be available here.

Alto Music

Middletown, NY, United States
Joined Reverb:2014

Reverb Protection

Simple Returns, Secure Transactions, Human Support

Learn more

Secure Checkout

Promoted similar listings













Product reviews

Reverb Gives

Your purchases help youth music programs get the gear they need to make music.

Oops, looks like you forgot something. Please check the fields highlighted in red.