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Posted: Thu Sep 24, 2015 5:00 pm
by Brandon W
i use a voodoo power supply and its fantastic because i can use a fuzz and the power supply has two power slots that you can regulate the amount of power the pedal gets.. so that dying battery fuzz sound is perfect with it
Posted: Thu Sep 24, 2015 5:06 pm
by Bacchus
I don't think I can get anything else on there without sorting out pancake jacks and right angled power daisy chains. Which I'd definitely like to do at some point.
Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2015 12:30 pm
by Bacchus
Nope, still not fixed. Was playing/recording for about two hours just now and thought that I'd noticed my levels gradually dropping as I was going. Unplugged from board and went straight into the computer and all was sparkly clean and good again. So the board was slowly dying, or slowly sucking tone/volume?
The good news is that when it does work, with a bit of stereo-bi-amping courtesy of the OC3 and Memory man, it sounds fucking huge.
Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2015 1:02 pm
by Doog
Is it just the output volume from your board, or does it sound like the signal is being lost elsewhere, so dirt pedals are getting less gainy, losing top-end, etc?
I'm guessing it sounds as crummy when all of the pedals are bypassed?
When it's quiet and that, does anything make it work nicely again... turning off the pedals or the power source for a few seconds?
Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2015 1:04 pm
by Bacchus
Sounds much quite, much less top end, even when bypassed. I should have pulled the power for a few seconds and see if that fixed it but I didn't think...
Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2015 1:22 pm
by Doog
It's tricky that it's a slow problem to manifest, makes it hard to reproduce easily :/
Are you sure it's not your amp?
Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2015 1:26 pm
by Bacchus
Yep. When it has happened in the past I've unplugged from the board and plugged straight into the amp and been fine, and today I wasn't even using the amp, just going straight into an interface and an amplitube. Again, problem was solved by unplugging from board and going straight in.
Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2015 3:48 pm
by Doog
Okay, I guess I would set up the board, turn shit on, then go and be busy for a few hours, then come back to see if the problem is there.
If so, go through the board, one-at-a-time swapping out pedals (for something true bypass-y), and then patch cables, using a brand new/decent one as your 'control'.
Are you going through the little built-in patchbay on the board? If so, have you tried just going via the pedal inputs and outputs to the guitar and amp?
Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2015 4:46 pm
by dots
what a strange issue, i hadn't ever heard of a slow power drain like that before...
Posted: Mon Oct 12, 2015 6:35 pm
by Bacchus
Doog wrote:Okay, I guess I would set up the board, turn shit on, then go and be busy for a few hours, then come back to see if the problem is there.
If so, go through the board, one-at-a-time swapping out pedals (for something true bypass-y), and then patch cables, using a brand new/decent one as your 'control'.
Are you going through the little built-in patchbay on the board? If so, have you tried just going via the pedal inputs and outputs to the guitar and amp?
That's what it'll come to I think. I hadn't thought of the patchbay on the board, good shout.