Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Guitar World
Guitar World
Entertainment
Phil Weller

“It’s like a playground. There are so many things you can do with this”: JHS Pedals retools one of its most underrated distortion pedals for its 10th anniversary

JHS Kilt 10.

JHS Pedals has celebrated the 10th anniversary of its underrated Kilt distortion by releasing the retooled, special edition Kilt 10 – and it’s been given a few tidy upgrades to boot.

In short, the JHS Kilt 10 overdrive pedal has got a “refreshed voice” via an updated clipping section for higher headroom, a smoother attack, and more dynamic versatility, alongside a “reimagined aesthetic” that looks like it was designed by a Scottish Cyberman.

The OG Kilt was built in collaboration with guitarist and producer Stu G, and was created to meet a breadth of in-studio and on-stage needs. It's been a stalwart of the JHS lineup since 2015, but perhaps doesn't receive the same plaudits that the company's more widely praised pedals – such as the Angry Charlie and Morning Glory – routinely enjoy.

So, as the milestone 10-year mark crept over the horizon, JHS Pedals decided to introduce a host of upgrades.

Its Gain control now offers “a far more usable range from 0-25%, unlocking articulate, low-gain textures that weren't previously accessible”, while the top end is now better equipped at slicing through the mix like a hot knife through butter.

There’s more output on tap, resulting in a more responsive tone “across your entire rig,” and more headroom for adding some balls to a clean amp, or stacking it with other ODs. Further still, its Low-Cut mini switch is “far more amp-friendly,” and ensures that it works just as well with vintage tube amps as it does digital amp modellers.

Lastly, its clipping circuit – while preserving the original’s tonal charm – now offers increased compression and distortion, which JHS says delivers “touch-sensitive nuance” in spades.

In all, there are controls for Gain, Volume, and Tone, mini toggles for clipping (G1 and G2), Low-Cut, and, alongside jack in/outs, there’s an additional Red Box jack for hooking up a latching footswitch. Doing so unlocks some pretty tasty gain staging personalisation.

The drive is at its lowest with G1 and G2 down. G1 injects more overdrive into the mix, G2 more fuzz. Therefore, flipping both up means things can get pretty hairy.

(Image credit: JHS Pedals)

“This is textbook Josh,” says founder Josh Scott. “It’s an old, vintage thing that's obscure-ish that people love but no one is making and is highly tweakable. It's like a playground for me, because there are so many things you can do with this circuit.”

The pedal is priced at $249 and is available now.

Fortunately, Sweetwater has slashed up to 25% off all its JHS Pedals stock for Black Friday, meaning the Kilt 10 can be preordered for a bargain price of just $186.75.

Head to JHS for more.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.