No prob max.
Basically, if you have an amp with a slave out, it’s the perfect setup for the work around. The slave out on just about every amp I know of, is post pre and power amp. This is the key. All you need to do is run line out of the slave out directly into your daw, and of course hook your amp up to a real cabinet at the same time to protect the amp/get the right interaction between the power amp and cab. These two are the key like I said, because since you are using a real cab, the slave out ( that you are running directly into your interface/in to your daw) is sending a direct signal with the real power amp and real cabinet interaction “baked in”. It works best if, say, I’m using a recto traditional cab IR In my daw: I will use my real recto traditional cab hooked up to my amp, and then run the slave out into my interface/ daw and use IR’s of the recto traditional cab; it is as far as I’m concerned , absolutely identical in feeling and performance as a real cab mic’d up.
Now, I realize this is completely overkill and completely defeats the purpose of using your amp quietly, but it is the best way to get the truest real sound from your amp into your daw using IR’s. Why do this if I have real cabs and can mic them up you ask? Sometimes, there are IR’s I absolutely love and want to use , so this is a great way for me to do that. Sometimes this works better than micing up a cab for me.
Oh, your amp doesn’t have a slave out? No problem. Get yourself a DI box ( check out the behringer one that’s about 30 bucks), run your amp head into this, and then there is an input that says “to cabinet”. Plug your speaker cabinet into it. Other side goes directly to your daw. Done. It’ll accomplish exactly the same thing. Again, it works best if you are using the same cab with the type of IR you are using, but even if I use say, my real Marshall cab in the room but am using a recto cab IR in the daw, it still sounds better than just simply using a load box.
Might sound confusing, it’s really not, let me know if that makes sense. May sound stupid, and I can totally understand why people would feel this way, but if you want the actual response and feel of your amp direct into your daw to use with IR’s. ( especially in the low end and low mids) it’s the best way to do it by far in my opinion.