Briman24
Well-known member
LolWhat we've learned:
Tube amps can't be 100% digitally copied because science and math says so.
*and*
Digital amps can 100% copy tube amps because science and math says so.
In other words:
View attachment 72510
LolWhat we've learned:
Tube amps can't be 100% digitally copied because science and math says so.
*and*
Digital amps can 100% copy tube amps because science and math says so.
In other words:
View attachment 72510
Spot on.Thus says the ultimate self-rightous tube snob. Where would we be without someone telling us "kids" what we need and don't need?
Thank goodness we have you here to school all of us lowly peons as to what everyone needs and don't need. Your knowledge of what everyone should do in this world is far too great to be kept to just one tiny message board. You must go forth with your God-like wisdom and spread it to the rest of the unwashed masses!
Seriously...shove your pompous and sanctimonious bullshit up your ass. Few people have the time or inclinations to study how voltage effects tone/tube/speakers et all. And no matter how much you know about effects processors and the minutiae of programming,it means absolutely nothing when you spout drivel about what you think "everyone" should do as far as how many amp,sims or songs they have. That is always the problem with preachers. They know a lot about one subject,so all other subjects are meaninglessness in their eyes.
You are the Sheldon Leonard of effects programming. We will alert the Nobel prize committee and let them know how deserving you are of an award.
Thus says the ultimate self-rightous tube snob. Where would we be without someone telling us "kids" what we need and don't need?
Thank goodness we have you here to school all of us lowly peons as to what everyone needs and don't need. Your knowledge of what everyone should do in this world is far too great to be kept to just one tiny message board. You must go forth with your God-like wisdom and spread it to the rest of the unwashed masses!
Seriously...shove your pompous and sanctimonious bullshit up your ass. Few people have the time or inclinations to study how voltage effects tone/tube/speakers et all. And no matter how much you know about effects processors and the minutiae of programming,it means absolutely nothing when you spout drivel about what you think "everyone" should do as far as how many amp,sims or songs they have. That is always the problem with preachers. They know a lot about one subject,so all other subjects are meaninglessness in their eyes.
You are the Sheldon Cooper of effects programming. We will alert the Nobel prize committee and let them know how deserving you are of an award.
Spot on.
They obviously don't know that the entire tube amp industry involves borrowing the designs of others and modding them. In fact, that is where tone comes from. Decades of refining the entire circuit. Vacuum tubes are in them because that is what they had back then. They had the head start. Transistors had to do it all over again. Profilers the same. Eventually, solid-state gear refined itself just like profilers did a decade ago. It all depends on the engineers just putting in the work to get there. It won't happen overnight.
Furthermore, the idea you turn on an amp and just get tone is about as far away from the reality of most electric guitar amps as you can get. The only amp that I played that had the ability to do that was a three-knob Orange Tiny Terror. Gain, Tone, and Volume. Non-Master amps come close to that also but that user just seems completely unaware of how to spend time with an amp to find its sweet spots. Everyone has made their amps sound bad and plenty still do and need to tweak. Then there is finding the speaker you want and then micing up the cab for recording. This idea we fall out of bed into tone because it's a tube amp is just plain silly. However, because they are a tube fanatic the other tube cork sniffers give them a pass, lol.
No wonder you had a bad experience with profilers if you are using some kid's profile done in their basement. There is your problem right there.Looking at a design and use it adding variations is a way to develop things AND still keeping each amp very personal in sound.
Modelling is stealing, right away, in full.
Do you think these thieves really have a collection of dozens of tube amps, cabinets, speakers, mics in their basement AND actually do the modelling for each one? You live in Barbie's world!
There are tons of corean kids models online one can download, tweak a bit and put in their next software update and be done with it.
The stories I could tell you!
About tweaking amps... well talk about yourself; others may be faster or happier with far less tweaking than you. My old Twin, Marshall, Boogie Preamp and Triaxis? Never had to spend more than a few minutes to get what I want.
I think he was trying to say that thieves have stolen our precious tube tones and corean kids make open software we can tweak and edit. I think.No wonder you had a bad experience with profilers if you are using some kid's profile done in their basement. There is your problem right there.
Plenty. Even Sunn O. I bias my own amps. Replace tubes when I buy a new amp. Right now I am considering a SC20h which would be my second Marshall in less than six months. For speakers I find Eminence takes on Celestion models. You are sounding very much like you are forwarding the no true Scotman fallacy. Even if I never played an amp in my life it doesn't help valve purists out of their lack of ability to have any objective facts to support what is clearly a subjective taste issue. So when they try to dismiss profilers as physically lacking in capability they are perpetuating a myth. They are simply wrong. So I chimed in.So...Batman.
What amps were you using before you came to the conclusion 10 years ago modeling was there in every sense. How long were you playing and gigging and recording before that. What modeler did you purchase 10 years ago that convinced you from hands on experience that there was no longer any difference. What tubes amps did you compare side by side, at gigs and in recording, to come to that conclusion.
You seem to have taken a journey that has not only convinced you, but are taking a very strongly worded position at times against people with a LOT of experience with the big amps and modelers, and many of whom are quite established in their playing abilities and gigging/recording experience (even though most are not disputing how advanced the tech is these days). I am genuinely interested in the specific equipment and steps you have taken along the way. I am making the assumption you have significant experience in this space, including many years with numerous high end tube amps and certainly Kempers and Fractals and all that in addition to your Helix.
Lab Series, that's a blast from the past!@Rock Bodom
40 yrs. ago my old band did an extended version of Rock Bottom in our set.
(was using a Lab Series L5 combo with a couple of 12" EVs back then)
How's that for mucking up the tube vs digital debate?
You need credentials to support an argument...again, please list your actual and specific experience points if you are serious about supporting your suppositions.Plenty. Even Sunn O. I bias my own amps. Replace tubes when I buy a new amp. Right now I am considering a SC20h which would be my second Marshall in less than six months. For speakers I find Eminence takes on Celestion models. You are sounding very much like you are forwarding the no true Scotman fallacy. Even if I never played an amp in my life it doesn't help valve purists out of their lack of ability to have any objective facts to support what is clearly a subjective taste issue. So when they try to dismiss profilers as physically lacking in capability they are perpetuating a myth. They are simply wrong. So I chimed in.
You need credentials to support an argument...again, please list your actual and specific experience points if you are serious about supporting your suppositions.
I was curious if the Profiler could really capture the sound and feel of my favorite tube amps. My first "profile" took just a few minutes to set up. When I compared the tone of my 'real' amp to the profile, I couldn't tell the difference. Mind blowing! I've been profiling my whole amp collection since then!
Hopeless!
No wonder you had a bad experience with profilers if you are using some kid's profile done in their basement. There is your problem right there.
Instead, I use profiles that come from professionals especially studios who own and have the gear. You can learn the background of those profiles in lots of cases and guess what, no matter how much you spend on trying to get a rig to sound the same, you won't, because of variations in amps and cabs that are naturally there. They went through scores of gear of the same models to find these special ones, which you can't have, without a profiler.
No valve amp manufacturer guarantees you 100% replication. They guarantee you a 'voice'. Voiced like a JCM800 or Voiced like a Plexi for example. They don't promise exact duplicates because you're in an analog world. Hello!
If profilers were doing anything illegal then they would have been sued by now.
I think he was trying to say that thieves have stolen our precious tube tones and corean kids make open software we can tweak and edit. I think.
It's ten years later and we have seen nothing. They can have a debate all they want but you actually need to support claims of theft with legal arguments. Not to mention if the day came they did successfully sue profilers then whatever law they used could probably be applied to each other also as they are all copying each other's circuits and modding them.Did I ever say I used kid's profiles?
There's a strong legal debate among amp builders about this issue. You will probably see something.
Serious question: how does Axe/Kemper perform for a variety of rolled back volume tones?