Q-Tune is the world’s first true DIY guitar/bass tuner pedal — a high-precision chromatic tuner with a full 2.8″ color LCD, delivered as a build-it-yourself kit in a rugged stompbox enclosure.
Inside, Q-Tune uses an advanced pitch-detection engine to lock onto your note with speed and stability, giving you reliable, pro-level tuning for gigging or studio work.
The display is big and bright — visible on dark stages or in bright rooms — and the touchscreen UI keeps it simple and intuitive.
It ships with everything you need to build it yourself: pre-flashed ESP32 module, the 2.8″ display, all components on a custom PCB, a painted aluminum enclosure (choose from classic 125B or compact 1590B footprint), and full assembly instructions.
Once built, Q-Tune doesn’t just sit on a shelf — it becomes part of your rig. With buffered-bypass or true-bypass options, top-mounted jacks to keep your board tidy, and multiple display styles (meter, strobe-inspired, big-letter, etc.), it’s flexible and road-ready.
Whether you’re a DIY pedal nerd, a touring guitarist, or someone who loves to build gear with their own hands — Q-Tune gives you pro-tuner performance, custom-build satisfaction, and a perfect companion for any pedalboard.
The Flick is my take on the ultimate “do-a-lot-with-a-little” pedal: a lush reverb, warm tremolo, and a versatile delay—all living together in one compact box. Built on the Daisy Seed platform and tuned by hand, it’s designed for players who want classic amp-style ambience without hauling around extra gear.
Whether you’re after smooth, bias-style tremolo, atmospheric stereo reverb, or a tight slapback for chicken-pickin’ riffs, the Flick slips easily onto a small pedalboard and delivers big, dimensional sound. It’s fully tweakable, too—dive into edit mode to dial in decay, diffusion, modulation, high-cut shaping, and more. You can even run it mono-to-stereo for gorgeous dual-amp spreads.
I originally built the Flick to bring vintage-amp feel to amps that didn’t have it—and it quickly became one of my favorite tools for both playing and experimenting. If you’re into DIY audio, the firmware is open source and ready for hacking, whether you’re dreaming of MIDI control, alternate algorithms, or your own custom mod curves.
Simple on the surface, deep when you want it—the Flick is a fun, musical three-in-one that earns its spot on any board.