jswevers
New member
Dear all,
I have the following question:
I am planning to extend my Diezel Einstein setup with a remotely controllable volume-switch pedal that I would like to put in
front of the Diezel, that is, between guitar and Einstein input. This pedal should allow me to switch between true bypass or
a reduction of the of my guitar signal (as an alternative of reducing the volume of my guitar).
In that way I should be able to combine a higher gain setting of channel 1 which I like for mode 2 with
a clean sound on mode 1 (with same gain setting but reduced guitar volume).
If I combine this with a Nobels MF-2 I thing can do the following:
- switch channels (Tubelit mod is installed, and Bernhard of Tubelit explained me how to use MF-2 with his mod)
- switch this volume pedal ON each time I go to mode 1 of channel 1 and switch it OFF again when I go to other channel or modes.
The MC-V of Nobels is not appropriate for this (Bernhard explained me) because it expects a strong signal (like in the loop of the amp)
and not a guitar signal.
Is this a good idea? Can this work? Does such a pedal exist, should it be a buffered one, and what to expect w.r.t. influencing my
clean guitar sound?
Thanks for your help.
Jan
I have the following question:
I am planning to extend my Diezel Einstein setup with a remotely controllable volume-switch pedal that I would like to put in
front of the Diezel, that is, between guitar and Einstein input. This pedal should allow me to switch between true bypass or
a reduction of the of my guitar signal (as an alternative of reducing the volume of my guitar).
In that way I should be able to combine a higher gain setting of channel 1 which I like for mode 2 with
a clean sound on mode 1 (with same gain setting but reduced guitar volume).
If I combine this with a Nobels MF-2 I thing can do the following:
- switch channels (Tubelit mod is installed, and Bernhard of Tubelit explained me how to use MF-2 with his mod)
- switch this volume pedal ON each time I go to mode 1 of channel 1 and switch it OFF again when I go to other channel or modes.
The MC-V of Nobels is not appropriate for this (Bernhard explained me) because it expects a strong signal (like in the loop of the amp)
and not a guitar signal.
Is this a good idea? Can this work? Does such a pedal exist, should it be a buffered one, and what to expect w.r.t. influencing my
clean guitar sound?
Thanks for your help.
Jan