I'm wondering. If you put a clean boost in the FX loop;
Another thing people use it for is to bypass the preamp and only use the amp's power stage and get all the dirt from a dedicated preamp pedal. Useful if your preamp is crappy and don't want to spend a fortune on a new amp. Most of the hip boutique stuff can be had for under 500, while you can easily spend 2+ large on a good amp.
Having written all this down I realized that NegE basically said the same thing... Oh well...![]()
Another thing people use it for is to bypass the preamp and only use the amp's power stage and get all the dirt from a dedicated preamp pedal. Useful if your preamp is crappy and don't want to spend a fortune on a new amp. Most of the hip boutique stuff can be had for under 500, while you can easily spend 2+ large on a good amp.
Having written all this down I realized that NegE basically said the same thing... Oh well...![]()
I'm wondering. If you put a clean boost in the FX loop;
-this will increase the gain into the power amp stage, right? How will this affect tone, if any way?
Erlend
Not really. He's talking about using the amp's preamp still for the tone shaping and put all the modulation and time based stuff in the loop. What you are saying is definitely another way.
Not really. He's talking about using the amp's preamp still for the tone shaping and put all the modulation and time based stuff in the loop. What you are saying is definitely another way.
I have found it is far less confusing if you use your amp for sounds (clean/dirt) and use your effects loop for effects. (Delay, Reverb, etc).
That would be cool. Haha
Seriously, most loops in quality amps are good now a days and are a great way to keep your effects clean (without distortion) and not interfering with your core tone. No set in stone rules though. If it works and sounds good to you then it is good!