Jen Elletronica
Jen Elletronica Jumbo Fuzz Pedal (1970's)
Jen Elletronica Jumbo Fuzz Pedal (1970's)
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This pedal is in very good condition with only minor cosmetic wear. It is fully working and has been tested in store.
The Jen Jumbo Fuzz was rebranded under a few different names but most famously was sold under the Dallas-Arbiter brand, it was also made under the Sam Ash brand under both the Jumbo Fuzz & Fuzzola name.. Both the Jen and the Dallas-Arbiter version are the exact same aside from the branding. From our reasearch it seems that the Jumbo Fuzz is a modified Big Muff Pi circuit with an added gate.
The information below about Jen Elletronica was found on an older listing online and fact checked
"In the early 1970's Jen Elettronica, a large musical equipment manufacturer in Italy, got into the Big Muff clone market with the Jen Jumbo Fuzz. Jen was one of the largest OEM (original equipment manufacturer) musical electronics manufacturers in the Europe at the time. Around 1967 they got into the electronic effects pedal business, making pedals for Vox, Dallas Arbiter, Sound City, Elka, and JHS (John Hornby Skewes), among other brands. Two of the most famous pedals Jen made were the Vox version of the ToneBender in 1967, and the Vox Cry Baby Wah Wah pedal in 1968. The creation of Jen ties back to the original Cry Baby Wah Wah pedal origins. The Thomas Organ Company, a US manufacturer, secured rights from Vox in England to handle all Vox distribution and manufacturing for the USA market. American made Vox amplifiers were to be less expensive solid state designs, rather than expensive tube amps like their European counterparts. Brad Plunkett at Thomas Organ was tasked with making a cheaper version of the MRB (mid range boost) switch found on the European Vox amps. The Wah pedal circuit was the result, which Thomas Organ decided to market as a stand alone pedal in 1967.
Early Wah's were made in California, but Joe Benaron, president of Thomas Organ, wanted to move production to Italy to reduce costs. Joe approached the manufacturing company Eko in Italy about making the Wah. Eko declined, but Eko's manufacturing manager, Ennio Uncini, wanted to do it. Ennio and Joe then formed their own company in 1967 called JEN (named from the J in Joe and EN from Ennio). Ennio supervised operations in Italy, where Jen handled the Cry Baby Wah production for a while in 1968, as well as making the Vox Wah Wah's and other Vox pedals like the Vox ToneBender. Thomas Organ distributed the pedals in the USA, and Jennings Electronics Industries (run by Tom Jennings, owner of the Jennings Organ Company and former head of Jennings Musical Industries) distributed them for the European markets. Jen then began to market a line of pedals under their own brand in 1968. Many were sold in the US under Gretsch and Sam Ash brands. Thomas Organ patented the Wah circuit design, but by the time the patent was granted there were already dozens of copies of the pedal on the market. It was decided enforcing the patent was too expensive, so no attempt was made to stop the knockoffs. Jen then got into the market of cloning other company's pedals themselves.
Around 1973 Jen created a series of four brightly colored effect pedals in die cast enclosures, each with slider controls rather than knobs, and each using reworked circuits based on existing designs from other companies. One of these was the Jumbo Fuzz, which was also rebranded as the Dallas Arbiter Jumbo Fuzz in Europe, and the Sam Ash Jumbo Fuzz/Sam Ash Fuzzola II in the America. The enclosure used was simiar to Jen's black powder coated ToneBender case, but with recessed areas on the top for the color label plates to be applied. The same enclosure was also used by Jen for some Vox ToneBender production and the Unicord Fuzz. A key identifying and dating feature to the enclosure was the white rubber skirt edging used around the bottom cover, which was identical to the edging used on 1973 production of the the Dallas Arbiter Wah Baby, the Jen/Vox Cry Baby Wah, and the Jen/Vox Double Sound distortion wah pedal."
