I've included a brief, iPad video of the pedal you will receive. It's not state-of-the-art but it will definitely demonstrate the characteristics of the pedal. The goal is not a flawless performance, rather I try to goose the dynamics out of the pedal.

Copy and Paste the link below to google and it will take you to the YouTube video.

                                                                                          https://youtu.be/eKuuWcKillo

The Keeley 1962x British Overdrive is a pedal designed to reproduce Eric Clapton’s famous ‘Beano’ tone on John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers. For the recording of the album Clapton used a 1960 Gibson Les Paul, possibly through a treble booster, into a modified Marshall 1962 2×12 combo, hence the pedal’s name.

It produces a fat, vintage overdrive with just the right amount of natural compression, but what really sets the pedal apart is the bite that it gives the front end of notes. Many overdrives are overly smooth and creamy, which is all very well, but I like a bit more snap and grit and this is exactly what the 1962 delivers. It’s articulate and allows you to show off your natural playing dynamics. I will try to bring those out in the make-shift video.

What Keeley has done, in effect, is take the Marshall Bluesbreaker circuit in a box and wrap it in top quality JFETs used in his Katana Boost. Essentially, you’re getting the kind of stacked overdrive you’d get from running two overdrive pedals together, giving you a rich, complex, harmonic amp response.

This pedal sounds amazing in front of a clean or dirty amp. I try to convey that by demoing with clean and dirty settings. 

Keeley has done a tremendous job in capturing Clapton’s ‘Beano’ tone, but you can achieve harder edged Marshall tones in a turn of a knob.

There was velcro attached on the bottom and when removed, it marred the serial number sticker keeping me from listing it as "Mint". This is number 0027 as indicated on the box.