Electro-Harmonix Pico Pitch Fork Polyphonic Pitch-Shifter Pedal
Experience the next evolution in pitch shifting from Electro-Harmonix with the Pico Pitch Fork, delivering the versatile pitch shifting of the original pedal in a compact, Pico-sized chassis. With 10 pitch shifting intervals, 30 pitch shifting options, and a ±3-octave range, Pico Pitch Fork offers major pitch-shifting power in a compact package.
Three modes are provided on the Pico Pitch Fork—Up, Down, and Dual. With Dual, you can use specially paired intervals for unique effects. The pedal features four simple yet powerful controls for shaping your pitch-shifted sound, including Shift, Blend, Volume, and Sweep. The footswitch allows for both momentary and latching operation depending on your performance needs. And with three distinct bypass modes, Digital, Analog Buffered, and Hybrid, you can choose to maintain signal purity, enjoy smooth transitions in and out of effect, or have the best of both worlds. The Pico Pitch Fork includes a 9V power adapter.
Up or Down Mode
- Detune
- Minor Second
- Major Second
- Major Third
- Perfect Fourth
- Perfect Fifth
- Major Sixth
- One Octave
- Two Octaves
- Three Octaves
Dual Mode
- Detune
- Deep Detune
- Major Second Up + Major Sixth Up
- Major Third Up + Perfect Fifth Up
- Perfect Fourth Up + Perfect Fifth Up
- Perfect Fifth Up + One Octave Down
- Major Sixth Up + Perfect Fifth Down
- One Octave Up + One Octave Down
- Two Octaves Up + One Octave Down
- Three Octaves Up + One Octave Down
- Digital Bypass (Green): This is the default bypass type. With this setting, your signal is fully digital even in bypass. This bypass type allows for the smoothest transitions between bypass and effect mode, which is most evident during pitch sweeps.
- Analog Bypass (Orange): Here, the bypass signal is analog and buffered. Analog bypass provides the purest, least-colored sound in bypass mode.
- Hybrid Bypass (Red): In this bypass type, when you switch from effect to bypass, your signal is initially digital, but the pedal will seamlessly switch to analog bypass when there's a brief gap in your playing. This allows for a smoother transition from effect to bypass when using pitch sweeps, while allowing your bypass signal to be analog the vast majority of the time.
