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Junior Varsity
Guitar Amp Modelers
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<blockquote data-quote="Jay Barracato" data-source="post: 125921" data-attributes="member: 24"><p>Re: Guitar Amp Modelers</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>OK I am probably talking to the wrong crowd here, but if you go the route of modelers with a patch per song:</p><p></p><p>NORMALIZE YOUR PATCHES</p><p></p><p>I had a band in the club bragging about no stage volume but they had 22 channels that at least half needed to be regained EVERY single song. That included the vocals because they were doing they own effect boxes on stage.</p><p></p><p>This is not a hard procedure. Plug your output into a board. Hit PFL on the board and watch the meter. Adjust your output of your modeler so that the level on the board is good with the pre amp of the board set somewhere reasonable. Then check each patch and adjust and save so the output gain gives the same reading on the board without changing the board settings.</p><p></p><p>Then your instrument should be nice and consistent in the mix regardless of what system you are playing through.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jay Barracato, post: 125921, member: 24"] Re: Guitar Amp Modelers OK I am probably talking to the wrong crowd here, but if you go the route of modelers with a patch per song: NORMALIZE YOUR PATCHES I had a band in the club bragging about no stage volume but they had 22 channels that at least half needed to be regained EVERY single song. That included the vocals because they were doing they own effect boxes on stage. This is not a hard procedure. Plug your output into a board. Hit PFL on the board and watch the meter. Adjust your output of your modeler so that the level on the board is good with the pre amp of the board set somewhere reasonable. Then check each patch and adjust and save so the output gain gives the same reading on the board without changing the board settings. Then your instrument should be nice and consistent in the mix regardless of what system you are playing through. [/QUOTE]
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