Which goes first in effects chain?
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- westtexasred
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Which goes first in effects chain?
I bought a One-Spot power supply so that I could make a little pedalboard .Is the the right order to put them in them?
Guitar > Compressor>Reverb>Distortion(1)>Distortion(2)>amp
or would you put the compressor after the reverb?
Guitar > Compressor>Reverb>Distortion(1)>Distortion(2)>amp
or would you put the compressor after the reverb?
It depends on which you plan on using at the same time. If you only ever have the reverb on without the distortion, its position only matters relative to the compressor.
Distortions compress your signal but in a different way to a dynamic compressor, so you should try experimenting with having it before or after but it depends a lot on how much gain you use.
I would go for something along the lines of -
Dist 1 > Comp > Dist 2 > Reverb
Distortions compress your signal but in a different way to a dynamic compressor, so you should try experimenting with having it before or after but it depends a lot on how much gain you use.
I would go for something along the lines of -
Dist 1 > Comp > Dist 2 > Reverb
Shabba.
- westtexasred
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I'd most always go like this:
Comp -> Dist1 -> Dist2 -> Verb
Some TDPRI guys have talked about comp at the end of the chain, but I like the comp coloration going on to my clean signal, rather than having my multi-pedal high gain turd distortion mess hitting the compressor so hard it just feels like an anti-dynamic limiter of sorts. In addition, the option of a clean boost with the comp kicked in to drive the front end of the next drive pedal in line can be useful to some. Orange Squeezer-type comps practically do this one automatically, and they (OS-type comps in particular) can sound great to keep the beef up, adding mid-lo girth and stuff to one's overdrive while providing decent compression when needed.
Comp -> Dist1 -> Dist2 -> Verb
Some TDPRI guys have talked about comp at the end of the chain, but I like the comp coloration going on to my clean signal, rather than having my multi-pedal high gain turd distortion mess hitting the compressor so hard it just feels like an anti-dynamic limiter of sorts. In addition, the option of a clean boost with the comp kicked in to drive the front end of the next drive pedal in line can be useful to some. Orange Squeezer-type comps practically do this one automatically, and they (OS-type comps in particular) can sound great to keep the beef up, adding mid-lo girth and stuff to one's overdrive while providing decent compression when needed.
agreed on all accountsultratwin wrote:I'd most always go like this:
Comp -> Dist1 -> Dist2 -> Verb
Some TDPRI guys have talked about comp at the end of the chain, but I like the comp coloration going on to my clean signal, rather than having my multi-pedal high gain turd distortion mess hitting the compressor so hard it just feels like an anti-dynamic limiter of sorts. In addition, the option of a clean boost with the comp kicked in to drive the front end of the next drive pedal in line can be useful to some. Orange Squeezer-type comps practically do this one automatically, and they (OS-type comps in particular) can sound great to keep the beef up, adding mid-lo girth and stuff to one's overdrive while providing decent compression when needed.
I've never used a compressor. It's one of those "effects" I can't be arsed messing with and don't think I need it. It's in the same category as reverb for me. Nice if I have them, not arsed if I don't. Chorus used to be in that category, but I actually like using a little of that now.
Brandon W wrote:you elites.
- the isaac eaton
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Im not one for compressors, but i think that reverb is a necessity, it brings so much life into your clean tones, just a little reverb makes everything sound so much more alive. I just use the reverb on my cyber twin, because I can set it how ever i want so it sounds pretty good. Reverb is a good thing! If i had an amp without reverb i would buy a reverb pedal and have it on at all times.ekwatts wrote:I've never used a compressor. It's one of those "effects" I can't be arsed messing with and don't think I need it. It's in the same category as reverb for me. Nice if I have them, not arsed if I don't. Chorus used to be in that category, but I actually like using a little of that now.
- timhulio
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See where you're coming from here, but I quite like that Husker Du, compressed distortion sound- the compressor tightens-up the fuzz/squall.ultratwin wrote:I'd most always go like this:
Comp -> Dist1 -> Dist2 -> Verb
Some TDPRI guys have talked about comp at the end of the chain, but I like the comp coloration going on to my clean signal, rather than having my multi-pedal high gain turd distortion mess hitting the compressor so hard it just feels like an anti-dynamic limiter of sorts. In addition, the option of a clean boost with the comp kicked in to drive the front end of the next drive pedal in line can be useful to some. Orange Squeezer-type comps practically do this one automatically, and they (OS-type comps in particular) can sound great to keep the beef up, adding mid-lo girth and stuff to one's overdrive while providing decent compression when needed.
- chrisplayer7
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Late to the punch on this, but that is the correct order of things.chrisplayer7 wrote:+1
PostPosted: Fri Mar 27, 2009 10:15 am Post subject:
ultratwin wrote:
I'd most always go like this:
Comp -> Dist1 -> Dist2 -> Verb
Dittoz.
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Of course you can experiment endlessly with different orders if you want to play around and get unique effects.