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FLAMMA FS06 Digital Preamp Pedal Guitar Effects Pedal with Built-in Cabinet Simulation 7 Preamp Models Saveable Preset

  • Based on 1,637 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Sunday, Nov 17
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Color: Preamp Purple


Features

  • 7 different preamp models that cover a wide variety of classic and modern guitar tones. Preamp Models: Deluxe Blue, AC31, Coral Reef, Plex 50, Blue Eye 100, MB 5th Gen, HVE 5151.
  • Every preamp model has two channels with a saveable preset slot for each preamp.
  • Built-in cabinet simulation allows users to connect directly to mixer/PA systemFootswitch can be used to switch channels or to toggle pedal ON/OFF.

Brand: FLAMMA


Style: Preamp


Color: Preamp Purple


Item Dimensions LxWxH: 2.75 x 4.78 x 1.97 inches


Item Weight: 0.3 Kilograms


Voltage: 9 Volts


Amperage: 300 Milliamps


Controls Type: Knob


Signal Format: Analog


Item Weight: 10.5 ounces


Product Dimensions: 2.75 x 4.78 x 1.97 inches


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: FS06


Date First Available: October 22, 2020


Color Name: Preamp Purple


Signal Format: Analog


Voltage: 9 Volts


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Nov 17

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Cool Reverb pedal, Sleek looks, great design and low cost, can't go wrong
Color: Reverb Silver
Ok, I shopped quite a few reverb pedals to end up with this one. I did some side by side comparison of this pedal along with Boss RV-6, GOKKO Creepy, Ammoon PocketVerb, Valeton Ocean Verb, and JOYO Atmosphere and TC Electronic HOF mini. I will tell you, the Price of this unit, although it is very affordable, was not the reason I ended up with it. I like this pedal best. 1 - it looks awesome , kinda has that DarkGlass look to it. 2 - it is incredibly user friendly 3 - the design is very well thought out, and I liked it best of all pedals, including TonePrint by TC Electronics 4 - has a good selection of Reverb Types 5 - Sounds great First, I will say, I am not a HUGE reverb buff, and saying that I mean, I don't like BIG, WARM, OVER THE TOP reverb types, I can usually find happiness in Room, Hall, Plate or Spring, and usually do not like Modulate, and am not a fan of Dynamic or Shimmer at all. For the most part, side by side, if you leave all controls neutral, out of the box, all the pedals have similar sounds. some were a little noisy and arcifacting, but overall, they all performed pretty good. My least favorite sounding was the BOSS RV-6. it was very warm and colored my bass tone. Yes, it changed the sound of my bass. none of the other pedals really did. The JOYO and Valeton had a lot of noise in many of their BIG types of reverb, but were pretty standard for the rest. The JOYO, Valeton, and Ammoon were all room temperature. The Boss was warm, but the Gokko Creepy and this Flamma were ICY COLD. This is what I look for in a reverb, I like cold, crisp, empty reverb, and these two pedals did a great job of that. The controls on the Gokko were clumsy, and you would need to continuously dial in your sound, with no real setting for the TyPES that is claims to have. The controls on the Ammoon and JOYO were big, and easy to see, pretty easy to read. The controls on the Valeton were tiny, hard to wok with, and it was impossible to read. The HOF mini, not enough control for me, and you can only use 1 tone print at a time. if they had the HOF2 regular pedal in stock, I probably would have got that and stuck with it, and probably would have passed over this FLAMMA FS02, and that would have been most unfortunate. So, this pedal, Icy cold, very crisp, and the Halls and rooms couldn't feel any emptier, and I LOVE IT. The controls are great. There is a vertical indentation on top of them all, with a dot on one end, so you can easily see how each nob is set with a quick glance. The POCKETVERB also did Delay, which I don't really care for. fi you like delay, that is not a bad pedal for the price, only problem is you have only one set of controls for both effects, but it is manageable. The design of this pedal is unique, and very good, easy to use and I love it. There is a row of colored lights across the pedal. there are 7 lights to be exact, and they are each a different color. and you guessed it, they represent the type or reverb. There is no selector nob, with no tiny lettering to try to read and see if you are on the right type. you have one button above the light bank. you press it and it moves across to the right. the types are starting on left - to the right. Room, Hall, Church, Cave, Plate, Spring, Modulate. once you remember that (and I did quickly), you are set. ALSO, you can set the controls to neutral before you move to the next type, or you can move to that type, hit the foot switch to turn it off, adjust the controls to 12oclock, and then turn the reverb back on. you get Level which is MIX, high and low cut. These do not color your sound, they are used to remove any coloring that may occur (which I found none) then you have Decay and Pre-delay. standard. So, once you dial in the sound you like for the type you are on, including the level (mix), you can hold the button for a couple seconds, and it is saved. This way, when you come back to it, you don't have to neutral out the nobs, and start over. Very halpful. Also, if you do move the control, the light will flash, letting you know that something has changed, so you can be sure to save it, if you want, or ignore it if not. It is a nice, sturdy, cool looking, well built, feature rich reverb with an ICY cold, crisp, empty sound that does not color your tone, and its only $66, what more can you ask for. I guess if you like Delay with your reverb, you could ask for that. And they answered, cuz for about $30 more, you can get the Ekoverb by Flamma, and I bet its good. that one, you can control the reverb and delay separately, unlike the Ammoon PocketVerb, but thats what you get for the extra $40 bucks From what I understand, the older Boss RV-2 or 3 were icy cold, and that many boss fans are unhappy with the current RV-6 because of the warmth it has. If thats you, and you need a new reverb pedal, check this one out Oh yeah, all that, and its stereo You can easily factory re-set if you want to clear all the settings, just take the power out, then hold the button and power on, when you let go of the button, it resets. Plus you can add or remove tails. take the power out, then hold the foot switch and put the power back in. this turns it on or off. When it is off, the pedal lights up RED (everything but the color lights for the type) and when it is on, the pedal lights up blue, so there is never a question which way it is. like I said, very well designed pedal. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2020 by Bass Player

  • MUST use 300 milliamp power source!
Color: Reverb Silver
MUST have 300mA power source! If you have a standard budget level multi pedal power source like a Donner pedal power, then you can only power one Flamma pedal like this or the Reverb or Delay. Most 9V power plugs on the power strips are 100mA. There is only one 500 mA outlet on the Donner located in position 1. The signal will pass through the Flamma but no effect will occur. I recommend the Truetone 1 Spot because it is 1,750 mA with five outlets. The Flamma Preamp is very high gain. The sweet spots are pretty narrow, and so far the level and gain I am setting about 20%. I need to turn the treble down quite a bit, and a noise suppressor helps a lot since this is a pretty high output pedal. This is not a mild overdrive pedal. It’s pretty intense and makes a lot of sound. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2023 by Monitoring Czar

  • Justo el sonido que buscaba
Color: Reverb Silver
Tardo un poco pero llego sin novedades, buen sonido, viene sin cables, llevo usando ya 3 meses y no ha dado problema.
Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2023 by Jose M.

  • Not as good as I hoped
Color: Delay Blue
Here is some things I didn't know before I bought this pedal, and wish I'd have known. 1. The looper doesn't work. There is a small pause inserted into your loop, this will interrupt the rhythm of what you're doing, you may loop one bar, but you'll get 4 and 1/2 beats in the loop, with silence for the 1/2 beat. 2. The tone adjustments adjust your clean guitar tone too, not just the tone of the delayed signal. This SUCKS. So if you want dark repeats, you'll have an equally dark guitar tone, you can't have a bright guitar tone with dark delays. So, the only option if you want a normal guitar tone is to have bright delays that get in the way. Nothing like tape, or analog delay. 3. The extra level of effects on each delay mode aren't that good. Like they tried to take their delay pedal to the next level, but none of the next level effects sound good. I like good sounding delay and experimental delay, so bought this over simpler delays. But the "experimental" layers of the effect just don't sound good, experimental doesn't mean sounding bad, it means sounding new and interesting. The choices for "experimental" fx that they made are just BAD. Each time I try to use this pedal, I end up trying to figure out how to remove as much as possible of the extra layer of effect for that mode. 4. You can only save one preset for each of the delay modes - most of which are not useful, even for really out there guitar stuff, I'm not a blues lawyer or a dad rocker or anything. So the first mode is the most usable, and you get one preset for it. 5. The pedal is sort of true bypass. When the pedal is off but plugged into power with signal going through the pedal, there is tone suck, and cloudy noise introduced. You can unplug the pedal, and then the pedal is true bypass. It will still pass signal, but now it is actually quiet, doesn't suck tone, and doesn't cloud your guitar tone. I bought this pedal when it was new, it was a major investment for me, I have been shopping for a delay for a couple of years, and I took the risk on this new pedal because the company looked like they were trying, they did some work on their branding, it has presets (I use delay on several songs, and setting the delay each time before the song sucks, but then this pedal only has one storeable preset on the one okay mode) they had a delay with several modes, which had additional fx for each mode, so get tweakable delays. It all looked good to me, and it does look good on paper, or in marketing. But, it is OKAY (only) on the first mode. It does have tap tempo which is nice, not necessary, but nice - when we're writing/jamming, if somebody gets something good going, it is easy to tap in the tempo with just your foot, and dive into the jam, the tap tempo works well enough. But, I should have saved over 50 bucks and just bought a good cheap analog delay as all the bells and whistles on this delay are useless, and the core sound is digital and yehck, and there is only one passable mode. Honestly, this pedal seems like the person or people who designed it, don't play guitar at all, so were just slapping code onto the delay code to make the tweakable parts of each mode, but the designers don't know what sounds good, so had no real design goal. It is like a deaf person designing this pedal's effects. Sure, slapping a stuttering pitch effect sounds awesome! And from other designers it is good. But if you're deaf, you can't know if what you are doing is musically useful or musically useless. These modes land in the useless category for me. I guess this is a long, rather negative review, my apologies, but I was VERY disappointed with this pedal, and really wish I'd gone with another brand. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2021 by Bushcraft Beats

  • It's ok...instructions are worthless...operation is a bit pissy.
Color: DrumLoop Green
The drum beats are pretty cool, but they're settings all printed on the side of the pedal or on a piece of paper in 2 point font so you need to have an image of them on your phone or tablet in order to read them. The way the pedal actually works in terms of playing and erasing tracks is not really explained in the instructions. You have to go to YouTube to find out how to actually use it. The most annoying thing about the pedal is that the tempo control is a "tap tempo" button which is very awkward and difficult to dial in a tempo. A simple "tempo dial" would be a lot easier. In general, for $100 I guess it's a decent unit but I've got a feeling there are better, more intuitive units out there. I can't really recommend it, but it works ok, thus the 3 stars. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2023 by Tim Grey

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