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T-Rex_Engineering Latitude and Longitude:

55°40′43″N 9°34′52″E / 55.6785°N 9.5811°E / 55.6785; 9.5811
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
T-Rex Effects
Company type Anpartsselskab
Industry Guitar effects
Founded1996; 28 years ago (1996)
Founder Lars Dahl-Jorgensen and Sebastian Jensen
Headquarters Vejle, Jutland, Denmark
Area served
Global
Key people
Lars Dahl-Jorgensen, Sebastian Jensen, and Steen Meldgaard Laursen
Products guitar effects
Website http://t-rex-effects.com/

T-Rex ApS is a manufacturer of handmade electric guitar effects pedals.

Company history

Based in the town of Vejle, Denmark, T-Rex Engineering was founded in 1996 [1] by friends Lars Dahl-Jorgensen and Sebastian Jensen.

Their first product was the T-Rex BigFoot MIDI footboard, followed by the T-Rex Mac1 MIDI-to-analog controller.

Their debut series of guitar effects included four pedals: Alberta, Mudhoney, Comp-Nova, and Tremster, followed by the Replica delay pedal. The Replica is a digital delay, and is T-Rex's most well-known pedal, endorsed by renowned artists like David Gilmour, [2] Pete Townshend, [3] John Mayer, [4] Steve Morse, Andrey Makarevich and was used by Gary Moore. [5] It has been awarded Guitar Player magazine's Editor's Pick award. [6] The Reptile delay pedal was later introduced as a "baby brother" to the Replica.

T-Rex's sixth pedal was the BetaVibe chorus pedal, launched in 2003 but subsequently discontinued.

Alongside its product development, T-Rex Engineering offers Scandinavian distribution of products for GeorgeL's (cables, plugs, and strings).

References

  1. ^ It is not clear what year the company founded. While company brochures give 1995 as the year of T-Rex's founding, the company website alternates between 1995 and 1996.
  2. ^ David Gilmour began using it on the On An Island Tour in 2006
  3. ^ "Pete Townshend". T-Rex Engineering. Archived from the original on 10 February 2011. Retrieved 7 March 2010.
  4. ^ See John Mayer [1] on T-Rex's official site.
  5. ^ See [2] on T-Rex's official site.
  6. ^ Guitar Player magazine, August 2003 issue

External links

55°40′43″N 9°34′52″E / 55.6785°N 9.5811°E / 55.6785; 9.5811