Companies provide schematics so that authorized service centers and repair benches can fix stuff, and the burden doesn't have to land in the lap of the manufacturer. Since that is the purpose of the schematic, it requires that stuff break down first, and be brought in for servicing, before any schematics start finding their way out into the world...unless they are something that some folks have reverse engineered.
If a product has not been on the market for very long, you can probably be confident that few, if any, have broken down and needed repair. At least in any manner that needs a schematic (no repair person would need a factory schem to fix a busted jack or replace a switch).
A great deal of what MXR/Dunlop produces these days uses surface mount technology which makes it less likely that they will break down, and MUCH less likely that someone will produce an accurate schematic through reverse engineering. If you want, contact MXR/Dunlop and ask...or else be prepared to wait a few years for stuff to break down and repair folks to start acquiring schematics from the company.
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