Ok, here's more stuff.
An early germanium transistor Fuzzrite:




Here's the two germanium transistors:

Here's another germanium Fuzzrite:

Here's the Ashbass Fuzzbrite side by side with a silicon Fuzzrite:

Here's the Sanner Fuzzrite:

A shot of the Sanner guts:

I'm curious, does anyone know how many Sanner Fuzzrites were made in the 90s? I know there was two production runs, and mine is from the second run, I heard somewhere that the second run was only one hundred pedals, can anyone confirm this?
The Sanner comes in the cool original trapezoidal shaped box but has the most poorly designed battery compartment I've ever seen - just open in the front, with a clip for the battery! No compartment door, nothing! Yikes. At first I though mine was just missing a piece of it or something! In fact that's how I bargained the guy down on it - "the battery compartment door is missing" haha!
The Sanner has less output than the Ashbass, which is more "authentic" but definitely not more practical in a live situation. It also doesn't do what every original Fuzzrite (and the Ashbass) does: get thin and trebly at full fuzz depth setting. It's very even tone-wise throughout the full range of the fuzz depth control, getting only moderately brighter at full, and not quite as boxy and low mid heavy as the Ashbass. I think the Sanner has a slightly narrower range of useable tones, although there are certain Davie Allan sounds that are very tricky to dial in with the Ashbass that readily leap out of the Sanner. Another "authentic but impractical" touch: the useless battery "on/off" switch that drains the battery even when the pedal is bypassed - and the switch needs to be on for the pedal to pass signal. Drains batteries (and there's no adapter jack). The Sanner is also more "unstable" than the Ashbass, but there is a lot of variance between old Mosrite Fuzzrites in this department - I don't think any time was put into fine-tuning each one based on variances in transistors.