@FractalAudio
THANK YOU CLIFF FOR THE BOSS HM-2!
I am one of the users who always wanted the HM-2 on the Axe-Fx 3.
I remember you saying something along the lines of "there's a ton going on with the mid-frequencies there" about the pedal.
I also wondered whether this would cause it to be challenging to replicate the pedal in the digital realm.
Last evening, I compared the Swedish Metal side-by-side will the real thing. A BOSS HM-2, which was a Christman present in 1990. It runs on 12v, not 9v, so I stuck a square battery in it and off we go! Bork, Bork!
The Fractal version is fan-tast-ic, thank you.
The only real difference I could find [with my ears] was the Fractal version had a tiny bit more 'body.'
All I did was turn the bass down a tiny bit on the Fractal and bingo! I would put that down to... [I don't have your technical vocabulary], a difference caused by the cumulative effect of components having different tolerances?
After that, I became confused. A few times I lost track and couldn't tell if I had the physical pedal on or the Fractal version.
Guys, you get all these derivatives of the HM-2 out there, right?
Roll your own. Experiment, do odd stuff, see what happens, you can have your own modded HM-2.
I kept the diode type as the original, but increased the number of diodes to four [on the left] and replaced the diode on the right with a single white LED.
Different flavour of HM-2!
No soldering or inhaling of the fumes required.