Duke of Metal
New member
Re: Boss NS2 vs ISP decimator
But one thing I learned is if you do it right, do it right from the start. I my self fooled around with the Hush pedals, Boss NS-2, ISP decimator and Tried the MXR Smartgate. I hesitated spending the money on the G-string at the start, but when I decided to go with one.. Let me tell you that I am not 1 bit sorry for doing it.
I found the "regular" ISP decimator doesnt work well in the loop. Its mainly designed to go between the guitar and amp.
The guitarist from the other band who we share our studio room with checked out my Decimator G-string and a week later, he added one to his rig.
Not gate out there will replicate a guitar's natural sustain/fade out.. but the ISP G-string does a most amazing job with that. doesnt cut your sustain.. unless of course you have it turned up all the way up as with any other gate.
Good luck
I know what you mean...Crap, I really wanted to avoid the gate thing, but my amp is noisy at the level that I love my tone at. How about Hush, I know that ISP guys are basically ex Hush, and Hush was suppose to be better than NS2 at the time .... no?
But one thing I learned is if you do it right, do it right from the start. I my self fooled around with the Hush pedals, Boss NS-2, ISP decimator and Tried the MXR Smartgate. I hesitated spending the money on the G-string at the start, but when I decided to go with one.. Let me tell you that I am not 1 bit sorry for doing it.
I found the "regular" ISP decimator doesnt work well in the loop. Its mainly designed to go between the guitar and amp.
The guitarist from the other band who we share our studio room with checked out my Decimator G-string and a week later, he added one to his rig.
Not gate out there will replicate a guitar's natural sustain/fade out.. but the ISP G-string does a most amazing job with that. doesnt cut your sustain.. unless of course you have it turned up all the way up as with any other gate.
Good luck