rottingcorpse
Well-known member
IMO a rigs ability to stay tight at volume is a combination of the power section,speakers and cab design,and what you are doing to your guitar signal BEFORE it hits the front of your amp.
IMO a rigs ability to stay tight at volume is a combination of the power section,speakers and cab design,and what you are doing to your guitar signal BEFORE it hits the front of your amp.
Interesting. Haven't tried itYa, scoop out a couple dB. at 250Hz and watch the mush go away a lot of the time.
Interesting. Haven't tried it
Yes, I agree 100%. High gain amps are designed around their pre-amp gain, and pre-amp gain mixed with looser power amp saturation doesn't tend to sound that great in a high gain situation. It can, but usually it doesn't.Modern high gain amps are more dependent on preamp gain than excessive volume from the power amp. They’re not designed to need glass shattering volume to sound their best like amps from 50 years ago. They usually do sound their best at moderate volumes (enough for the power amp to tighten it up), and anything above that is diminishing returns or flat out worse in some instances.
i have this exact pedal. I will try tomorrowLower 250Hz to remove mush and bump 2KHz (and sometimes a little 4KHz) if you need extra presence/sparkle.
Never need more than a dB or two if you already have a great tone. Definitely not meant to fix a meh tone.
Been doing this with both analog and digital for years. Use a ParaEQ with amps so the numbers aren't exact
but the results are the same. First in line in the FX loop.
View attachment 78444
i have this exact pedal. I will try tomorrow
i have this exact pedal. I will try tomorrow