It's my first time trying out this pedal, but I was really blown away by the
controls being just buttons. I hear the original DC-2 had mechanical switches but these are now
electrical—that alone shows this is a great update. At first, I thought having buttons alone
would make this pedal a one-trick pony. But at the same time, I do agree that knobs are sometimes
difficult to manage. When you know the exact tone you want, knobs are helpful, but if you
don't, having numerous knobs with infinite possibilities can lead to an endless search. So I
think having just these four buttons and less options is actually really helpful, because it means
you can't go wrong.
The DC-2W felt to me like a chorus at first, but I would not be able to recreate this
tone with a chorus. This is a really interesting pedal. The circuit uses BBD (bucket brigade) just
like a chorus, but I hear the DC-2 has a different circuit design. Choosing “1” on the
Mode Selector gives you a sound like a light chorus. But as the number increases, the effect not
only feels bigger in width, but longer in time as well.
If I were to describe a chorus like the CE-2W as a natural seasoning, then the
Dimension is more like an artificial flavoring that no-one would notice is artificial, if that makes sense! For people who don't like that everyday chorus effect, and aren't too
fond of a phaser either, the Dimension would be your ticket. It's got space and depth without
being synthetic. It's very subtle too, so it would probably sound better on clean than
distorted tones. Also, if you use stereo output it enhances the spaciousness even more.
The SDD-320 mode reproduces the rack effect of the same name. It's got more highs
than the Standard mode, and sounds thicker. Being the studio rack effect that it was, all the
settings sound full and complete, and I like this mode more. I think this would sound great on
vocals and drums as well. I use stompboxes for things like that, and it sounds awesome sometimes.
Using analog effects in home recordings can thicken up your sound too. There isn't a setting on
here that doesn't sound good, so applications are endless.
And I love the fact that you can push two buttons at the same time. So there are four
single-button sound types, plus six types with two buttons pressed, plus the Standard and SDD-320
mode—so that's 20 sounds to choose from. Each one has different depths, time, space...maybe it's not as simple as it seems. I guess you can end up chasing your tone down a rabbit
hole with this pedal too, but in a good way!
My preference is button “3” or “4” for the single-button, or
for double-button settings, I would choose my tone on “1”
or “2” and add from there. The tone thickens up that way. While the double-button tones
are thicker, the single-button
tones are more subtle and that's a good thing in many cases. This pedal is not the one-trick
pony I thought it would be
at all—it's very fun to play with.
View Product
DC-2 Dimension C / 1985–89
The legendary “thick modulation without the
chorus wobble.”
When you first encounter the DC-2 Dimension C, the model name and unique
four-button configuration don't give much away—it's hard to guess what kind of
effect this pedal will actually create. In operation, there are similarities to a chorus, but
that's not the full picture. The DC-2 might thicken up and add width to your tone, but it
doesn't “wobble” like chorus. Likewise, while internally it features a BBD chip—just like a chorus—the circuit is completely original, hence the unique effect.
The DC-2 is a compact version of the Roland SDD-320 Dimension D rack effect, which
was popular in the studios at the time for recording and mixes. You'll note the similarity
in the spatial effect and the four-button layout clearly inherited from the original unit—although the DC-2 didn't have the “secret” feature of the original
SDD-320, where pressing two buttons at the same time achieved a mixed effect. The DC-2 was
released in the later months of 1985 and was in production until 1989. In 1988, its digital
successor, the DC-3 Digital Dimension (later re-named the Digital Space-D), was released, and the
Dimension era continued until 1993.