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Electro-Harmonix String9 String Ensemble Pedal Certified Open Box

Synthesizer and Effects Pedal for Electric or Acoustic Guitar and Bass with 9 Presets, FX, Wet/Dry Output, and Power Adapter
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Item ID: String9Pedd1
Electro-Harmonix String9 String Ensemble Pedal

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This item is in like-new condition and perfect working order. Product includes all original accessories. This product ships in its original factory packaging.

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A Symphony of Synthesizers for Your Guitar or Bass

Synthesizer pedals may be familiar, but Electro-Harmonix has developed an unparalleled suite of symphonic and synthesizer tones that could successfully place your guitar anywhere between a classical odeon and Chicago’s Berlin nightclub. The String9 String Ensemble pedal features a streamlined UI that lets you easily dial in your sound, boasting a dedicated knob for selecting any of the nine onboard presets, modeled after a host of historic synth patches and iconic EHX effects. Independent effect and dry volume controls allow you to mix at the output evenly and precisely, with a separate dry output jack that reliably carries through your input signal at unity gain. Control knobs vary with each preset, tailored to maximize your modulation of these hallmark ensembles. Sweetwater musicians are impressed that no special pickups or MIDI are required, allowing you to seamlessly morph your guitar or bass into any number of tame or unruly synthetic symphonies.

Presets for a world of tone

  1. Symphonic: Re-create full-scale orchestration with responsive outputs that complement variations in playing, picking, legato, and more. CTRL 1 can be used to add brightness, while CTRL 2 handles sustain and release, functioning similarly to a reverb.
  2. June-O: This patch delivers its namesake classic string-synthesizer patch heavily used throughout the early 1980s, boasting huge sounds with lush textures that feel like droning techno basses or bright, organ-like chords. CTRL 1 functions like a standard tone adjustment, while CTRL 2 is a 5-octave switch, ±2 octaves on either side of your input.
  3. PCM: Use this for capturing the vintage digital keyboards’ take on smaller string ensembles, great for string parts that follow the guitar, broadly expanding its pallet. CTRL 1 handles tone, and CTRL 2 introduces a vocal vibrato, increasing its depth as you dial it up.
  4. Floppy: Experience the peculiar qualities of classic mechanical string machines, with all the characteristic warble and noise of the plastic discs and tapes used in the originals. CTRL 1 handles tone, while CTRL 2 takes care of sustain and release time, letting you create lush soundscapes to back your guitar part with sonically interesting overlaps.
  5. AARP: If you’re looking for some textbook wonderfully ’80s synths, then this preset has you covered, producing bright, consistent orchestration reminiscent of its namesake machine. For added character, use CTRL 1 to engage a Small Stone Phase Shifter and modulate its speed, leaving sustain and release times with CTRL 2.
  6. Crewman: Reproduce iconic Italian synthesis with this patch, boasting bright brass with organ-like qualities, sweeping through every register with the panache of a Pink Floyd track. Time and direction of rich filter envelope sweeps are handled with CTRL 1, broken out into two parts. In the counterclockwise direction, the sweep begins from a closed point, with the knob position designating attack time. Past “noon,” the filter sweep flips, starting open and dialing in its decay. In both cases, sweep time increases as the knob’s position approaches its highest value, while CTRL 2 takes care of sustain and release.
  7. Orch Freeze: Add lush orchestration to either follow or complement your playing, allowing for tremendous expression and harmonic contrast. CTRL 1 allows you to shape and refine the tone of the strings for the optimal blend.
  8. Synth Freeze: If you’re looking for bright, crisp synths that are full and tight in both monophonic and polyphonic patterns, then this has you covered. CTRL 1 offers the same degree of tone-sculpting as you’ll find in preset 7.
  9. Vox Freeze: This combination setting pulls choir and string sounds from the EHX MEL9 pedal, inspired by the audio tape oscillators of the mellow electro-mechanical keys of the 1960s. Use CTRL 1 to texturize your tone, boasting a Small Stone Phase Shifter whose speed can be easily adjusted.

Note: Each of the “freeze” options function in the same way, boasting “auto” and “latch” modes via hallmark EHX Freeze effects, handled with CTRL 2. In “auto” freeze, what you play sustains indefinitely until you either lightly tap the strings above the pickups, or the pedal receives an additional input, following along as you play. With “latch” freeze, inputs are infinitely sustained, toggled with the stompbox. “Auto” and “latch” modes are selected when CTRL 2 is in at any value in pre- and post-noon positions, respectively.

Electro-Harmonix String9 String Ensemble Pedal Features:

  • Designed around historic ensemble string and synth patches to let you re-create lush, iconic sounds from nine onboard presets
  • Precision engineering means impeccable tracking of your input without the need for supplementary mods, pickups, or MIDI
  • Independent Wet and Dry controls let you balance your FX mix for optimal balance
  • Dry output jack consistently carries your input signal at unity gain for crystalline clarity, ensuring no disruption to your setup
  • Control knobs are tailored to each preset, providing for greater control and inventive tone shaping
  • EHX Freeze effect is present in three presets, ensuring consistent, unbroken sustain
  • 9.6VDC-200mA power adapter included
  • Dimensions: 4.75 inches x 4 inches x 2.25 inches
What is Certified Open Box Gear?

At Sweetwater, we're so picky that what we call "Certified Open Box" is actually better than what most music retailers sell as "new" gear! Our gear hasn't endured hundreds of people a week plunking away at all the keyboards, fumbling through Stairway to Heaven on every guitar or playing with every fader and knob on a mixer or control surface.

Certified Open Box (also known as a demo) means we’ve had it out of the box for our YouTube channel, displayed at events, tested in our studio, or maybe it was in a customer’s hands for a few days and isn’t ‘factory fresh’ as a result. Every Certified Open Box item we sell has Sweetwater’s 2-year Total Confidence Coverage™ warranty and has been tested and verified up to ‘new’ specs by our factory-authorized technicians to make sure it’s in perfect working order before we ship it to you.

When you buy a Certified Open Box item at Sweetwater, you get:
  • 2-year Total Confidence Coverage Warranty™!
  • Products inspected and tested by our factory-authorized techs, guaranteed to function like new (or better)!
  • FREE shipping on most items
  • Equipment that will MEET or EXCEED your expectations!

Click HERE to browse our current inventory of Certified Open Box equipment. Purchasing Certified Open Box gear from Sweetwater is a smart and safe way to save!

Warranty Info

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Tech Specs

  • Pedal Type: String Ensemble Emulator
  • Analog/Digital: Digital
  • Effects: Symphonic, June-O, PCM, Floppy, AARP, Crewman, Orch Freeze, Synth Freeze, Vox Freeze
  • Inputs: 1 x 1/4"
  • Outputs: 2 x 1/4" (effect, dry)
  • Bypass Switching: Buffered
  • Power Source: 9.6V DC power supply (included)
  • Power Usage: 100mA
  • Height: 2.25"
  • Width: 4"
  • Depth: 4.75"
  • Manufacturer Part Number: STRING9

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Reviews

String9 Pedal
Already have the Mel9 and Synth9 pedals, thought I'd like this one as well.
The 1st one I received had some issues, in typical Sweetwater fashion, a new unit was shipped out to me immediately.
Unit has nice string sounds available with lots of gain in the signal.
(Seems like more gain than the other 2)
The pedals input is from my loop switcher, from there it goes to a dedicated channel
on my mixer, than out to pa. (See Photo)
I'm playing mostly Acoustic/Electric using a BBE Acoustimax preamp and a spark booster pedal.
So far my Fav is setting no. 1 (Symphonic) as it has a very full sound and works well mixed with the sound
of my acoustic. A bit of High Choir from the Mel9 pedal added it and it sounds very full. Tracking is good,
just like the other synth pedals. A winner in my studio!
Music background: Playing guitar for 40yrs
Useful Pedal
This pedal fills a niche in our band. Lets us play some ELO tunes that we would otherwise have to skip. I use it mainly on the June-O setting. Takes a little bit of time and experimentation to dial it in, but once you have it set properly, it sounds great!
String Nine
If you already have the Mel 9 and think "Ok I have strings, I'm set" think again. For instance, I've been using the Mel 9 cello in verses of a song and the urge was switch it to strings on the chorus but two things. One the cello disappears and two, switching live is a hassle. Now I orchestrate with ease, wonderous combinations of powerful layers! Lots of touch sensitivity and sustain contrasts when using the two together.
Music background: singer/songwriter
Symphony in a box
This pedal is fun. I'm still exploring what it can do.
Remarkably fun pedal! Sounds great.
It's somewhat of a pricy pedal, but it does exactly what I hoped it would. It's hard to stop playing it...sounds great and it's so much fun to use. I've been acquiring guitar effects pedals for over 40 years. I can't remember that last time I bought a pedal and had this much fun. Below are segments of the same comments I posted on YouTube.

Just got this pedal from SweetWater a few days ago. Can't stop using it. The first 3 sounds are where it's at for me. To incorporate it with my band or acoustic duo I think the Juno and the PCM will work the best, as they're a little more subtle. Using a volume pedal after the String 9 works really well. I have a gig this weekend so I'm going to try it out. It's already mounted on my gigging board...which I didn't plan to do so quickly...but it's a keeper and sounds great. Fills in the holes incredibly well for some of the 70s and 80s stuff the band does.

Running it in parallel is where its at for me. I opened up the pedal and set the internal switch to mute. So when the pedal is off, there's no sound coming out of the Effect output jack. I'm basically running my guitar into the pedal then sending the Effect output to a volume pedal then into a DI box then sending the XLR into to the PA mixing board where the String 9 has its own channel. The Dry output buffered signal from the String 9 goes to the rest of the pedals on my board and then into my Marshall amp. Sounds fantastic!!! I love using the volume pedal to blend the sounds together. Really handy if you want to lower the volume of the String 9 during verses or a guitar solo, then bring the volume up on the String 9 for a chorus section. It also sounds great behind my acoustic guitar as sort of a background string pad. Really works well (again I run it in parallel with my main guitar signal so the String 9 has its own channel on the PA mixing board.)

I researched this pedal for several months after wondering if there was a pedal out there that could do exactly what it does. It does pretty much everything I hoped for. Can't wait to hear it do the synth parts in the middle of Rush's "Distant Early Warning". Sounds great using at home. I've been using 2 different amps: one set up on my left for the Dry guitar sound, and the other amp is getting the String 9 effected signal and that amp sits on my right. Sound is huge! This Saturday I'll find out how it works with the band. It's a little box of Magic!
Music background: Professional working guitarist for over 40 years. Rock & Jazz/Rock fusion.