| Model Name |
Launched |
Current |
Description |
| Foxey Lady |
1967 - |
Discontinued |
The first model is a clone of the Mosrite Fuzzrite designed by Ed Sanner. Built for Guild Guitars, later versions had three knobs and are precursors of the Big Muff Pi. Foxey Lady design by Mike Matthews, the founder of Electro-Harmonix, with modifications and biasing by Bill Berko. |
| Muff Fuzz |
1969 - |
Discontinued |
The Muff Fuzz was designed to be directly connected onto the amp instead of being a stompbox, and instead of a foot switch it contained a side switch along with a level knob. |
| Big Muff Pi (V1) |
1969 - 1973 |
Discontinued |
The first version of the Big Muff, commonly called the "Triangle" Muff because of the layout of the knobs forming a triangle shape, designed by Bob Myer and Mike Matthews. It contained three control knobs - Volume, which controlled the overall volume of the pedal, Sustain, which controlled both the amount of distortion and the amount of sustain, and Tone, which controlled the high-end frequency. These three knobs would appear on almost every Big Muff pedal that followed. |
| Little Muff Pi |
1971 - |
Discontinued |
The transistorized version of the 1969 Muff Fuzz, now as a stompbox. Later, Electro-Harmonix would modify the circuit by replacing the transistors with an op-amp. |
| Big Muff Pi (V2) |
1973 - 1977 |
Discontinued |
Commonly called the “Ram's Head" model for its graphic on the corner of the pedal depicting what resembles the head of a ram. In order of production, this version can be further subdivided into the "47", "73", and "Violet" models. The "Violet" model was famously used by Pink Floyd's guitarist David Gilmour. |
| Big Muff Pi (V3) |
1977 - 1978 |
Discontinued |
The first Big Muff which used the classic red and black graphics. Originally just a graphical redesign for the "Ram's Head", but gradually evolved into its own circuit. Later models were the first one to include a tone bypass and a power jack. |
| Big Muff Pi (V4) |
1978 - 1980 |
Discontinued |
Sometimes called the "Op-Amp" for its op-amp chip circuitry, this version also features one less gain stage, but is housed in the same enclosure as its predecessor, the V3. This model was famously used by Billy Corgan of The Smashing Pumpkins.[8] |
| Big Muff Pi (V5) |
1978 - 1980 |
Discontinued |
Also called the "Op-Amp", this version was produced and sold in tandem with the V4, and featured the same Op-Amp circuitry as the V4 with the addition of a tone bypass. |
| Deluxe Big Muff Pi (1330) |
1978 - 1982 |
Discontinued |
The Deluxe Big Muff has an EH1330A circuit board, added compressor volume and threshold controls, and features a blend-on switch, a blend-on output and a compressor output. A slightly modified version was reissued in 1980. |
| Big Muff Pi (V6) |
1979 - 1982 |
Discontinued |
This pedal was last version of Big Muff before Electro-Harmonix was liquidated in 1982. It was a transistor version of the Big Muff with a tone bypass, and used the EH3034 circuit board. |
| Little Big Muff Pi |
1979 - 1982 |
Discontinued |
This pedal was introduced as a compact rendition of the Big Muff, with its controls similar to the 1969 Muff Fuzz containing only a tone switch and a level knob. |
| Muff Fuzz (Op-Amp) |
1979 - 1982 |
Discontinued |
Based on the 1969 Muff Fuzz, this is an Op-Amp version, and was powered by a 1458N IC chip. |
| Red Army Overdrive |
1990 - 1992 |
Discontinued |
The first Muff type pedal made in the U.S.S.R. Released by Mike Matthews' new brand called Sovtek, after Electro-Harmonix went out of business for the second time. |
| Big Muff Pi (V7) |
1991 - |
Discontinued |
Commonly named the "Civil War" Muff because of its graphical design, made in Russia. It has a blue and white colored chassis, and used the same circuit as the "Red Army Overdrive" model. |
| Big Muff Pi (V7, Green Russian) |
1994 - 2000 |
Discontinued |
Released by Sovtek and made in Russia, it has an army green chassis, and used the same circuit as the "Red Army Overdrive" and "Civil War" models. |
| Big Muff Pi (V7, Black Russian) |
1998 - 2009 |
Discontinued |
Released by Sovtek and made in Russia, it has a black chassis and is a slightly modified circuit of the “Green Russian” model. |
| Big Muff Pi NYC Reissue (V9) |
2000 - Present |
Available |
After the chain of Russian Muff pedals from Sovtek, the Big Muff returned to production in New York. This circuit was designed by Bob Myer, and it has some variants with slightly modified circuits. The first edition circuit board was marked EC3003 and used four 2N5088 transistors, powered by 9V. |
| Double Muff |
2001 - |
Discontinued |
Based on the 1969 Muff Fuzz with a nano-sized chassis and powered by 9V. This pedal could select between “single mode” - which offered the original Muff Fuzz sound, and “double mode” - which added a bit more distortion to the sound. |
| Little Big Muff Pi Reissue |
2006 - Present |
Available |
The Little Big Muff sounds very similar to the NYC reissue, but a bit brighter and less bottom end to the sound. Built in a compact diecast box and powered by 9V. |
| Metal Muff with Top Boost |
2006 - Present |
Available |
Redesigned for heavy metal players. This pedal has a 3-band equalizer and a separate "top boost" control. |
| Bass Big Muff Pi |
2008 - Present |
Available |
Designed for bass players and inspired by the 1998 "Black Russian", this pedal has an added switch which allows for a low-end boost. |
| Nano Muff Overdrive |
2008 - 2023 |
Discontinued |
Reissue of the 1969 Muff Fuzz and the 1971 Little Muff Pi, with a nano-sized chassis and powered by 9V. |
| Big Muff Pi with Tone Wicker |
2008 - Present |
Available |
Classic Big Muff Pi pedal with a tone switch and a high frequency filter (Wicker) switch. |
| Double Muff (Nano) |
2010 - 2020 |
Discontinued |
Nano-sized version of the 2001 Double Muff, powered by 9V. |
| Deluxe Bass Big Muff |
2012 - Present |
Available |
A deluxe bass version based on the 2008 Bass Big Muff Pi. This pedal has dry blend, noise gate, high pass filter and low pass filter controls. It contains an XLR DI, and buffered dry and effect outputs. |
| Nano Big Muff Pi |
2013 - Present |
Available |
Nano-sized version of the 2000 NYC Reissue, powered by 9V. |
| Deluxe Big Muff Pi |
2014 - Present |
Available |
Deluxe version based on the 2000 NYC Reissue, with added attack, noise gate, midrange level, midrange frequency and midrange section controls. |
| Nano Green Russian Big Muff |
2017 - Present |
Available |
Reissue of the 1994 Sovtek "Green Russian", with a nano-sized chassis and powered by 9V. |
| Nano Op-amp Big Muff |
2017 - Present |
Available |
Reissue of the 1978 "Op-amp" version, with a nano-sized chassis and powered by 9V. |
| Triangle Big Muff |
2018 - Present |
Available |
Reissue of the original 1969 Big Muff Pi “Triangle”, with a nano-sized chassis and powered by 9V. The pedal was released in honor of the 50th anniversary of Electro-Harmonix. |
| Sovtek Deluxe Big Muff Pi |
2018 - Present |
Available |
Based on the 1991 Sovtek “Civil War”, this version has an added expression pedal input for controlled midrange frequency by foot switch, and has dry blend, noise gate, midrange level, midrange frequency, midrange section controls and the “Wicker" switch, powered by 9V. |
| Ram's Head Big Muff Pi |
2019 - Present |
Available |
Reissue of the 1973 "Violet Ram's Head", with a nano-sized chassis and powered by 9V. |
| Nano Metal Muff |
2021 - Present |
Available |
Nano-sized version of the 2006 Metal Muff. |
| J Mascis Ram's Head Big Muff Pi |
2022 - Present |
Available |
J Mascis signature edition, with special artist graphics. Used the same circuit as the 2019 Ram's Head. |
| Big Muff Pi Hardware Plugin |
2022 - Present |
Available |
This pedal works like a standard DAW plugin, but recorded tracks go through the analog circuitry of the Big Muff Pi, adding analog warmth to the sound. It provides a 2-in/2-out USB connection for audio recording. |
| Big Muff 2 |
Limited edition, released in 2025 |
Available |
A sharper and more aggressive-sounding op-amp model built in partnership with JHS Pedals based on an unproduced schematic Bob Myer created in the 1970s.[9] |
| Bass Big Muff 2 |
2026 - present |
Available |
A bass guitar version of the Big Muff 2. The Bass Big Muff 2 adds a bass boost switch and a blend control to mix the unaffected signal back into the distorted signal.[10] |