
Math class was useless. This isn’t.
The Summer School Fuzz 101 features two BC108 silicon transistors. The same ones that made London sound like London in the ’60s. High-gain, noisy, glorious. Summer School took that DNA, added a few legendary mods, and somehow didn’t screw it up.
Volume. Fuzz. Bias. Tone. That’s the board.
Bias is the knob you didn’t know you were starving for. It starves the transistors. Turn it down and the fuzz gets gated, sputtery, broken – like your amp is trying to die but keeps catching its breath. Turn it up, and it smooths into a thick, saturated distortion that doesn’t need to apologize to anyone.
The Tone knob is stolen from a Rat. Just the filter part, not the chaos. Low-pass, high-cut, whatever you want to call it. Roll it back to blend in. Crank it to cut through a mix full of people who think they’re louder than you.
And the art? Easter eggs everywhere. Pedal-building jokes. Math references from freshman year. The kind of details that say someone actually cared.
$165. No menus. No presets. No bullshit.
Plug in. Turn knobs. Let the transistors do what they’ve been doing for sixty years. If you need more than that, go buy a computer.










