Just ordered new today. I have no idea where to even begin with this, but my intent is to use this for more polished and consistent pickup recordings. I am a little scared of how much work will be needed to dial in the tones I need based on my previous experience with modellers and profilers.
I always expect stock patches to be either be way over the top or just unconvincing, but the sounds people are putting out are undeniably good. But, can those tone be had with minimal recording experience?
1. How interchangeable are the patches between the hardware versions?
2. Can I get decent patches without investing a bunch in 3 party patches.
3. Can patches be exported freely between individuals.
Any suggestions as to how I can best acclimate to being a first time Fractal owner would be much appreciated.
Also, what kind of tones are you after? Give me some examples, I can steer you in the right direction in the IR world. And has been said before, “most” of the amps behave like the real amp with eq settings etc. so, If you like a recto and Set it up a certain way, start there, it’ll behave the same.
Big big thing alot of people forget: keep the damn master volume LOW on high gain tones. They model power amp behavior in these amps, and contrary to tube amp folklore and Internet forum idiots, high gain amps ( in general) do not sound good cranked up. I never have the Rectos master volume above 9 o’clock. Ever. The headroom meter is gotta be one of the best damn things they have added in a long time, this will really help you out. If you are hitting 0db, you are overdriving the power amp. 5150? Master volume never above 10 o’clock. 5153? Herbert? Same thing. If you are getting muddy tones, start here; I’ll bet money the master volume is far too high. This how I set all of those amps that I own in real life as well.
The only “tweaky nerdy” stuff I do is I’ll occasionally drop the bias on some of the high gain amps to 35-40 percent or so. Colder amps generally sound better to me doing high gain, especially the herbert, and 5150 models. This is not make or break by any means, but it’s something you may wanna play around with.
Speaker impedance curve: probably THE best thing to come out in a really long time with the axe. This can really make your low end better than anything you’ve ever heard. I couldn’t live without this now that I’ve heard it. I generally live on recto straight, recto large, the Marshall BV, and 5153 SIC’s. Those are also just about the only cab IR’s I use as well.
But all in all, the thing is as plug in and play as you want, or as complicated as you could possibly make it. Long gone are the days of having to tweak endless parameters to get a good sound out of these things. If it was still like this, I would t be into it at all, and I wouldn’t own one.