donaldr
New member
I have an Ampeg SCR-DI as my DI rig. Love it.
Really good piece of equipment that is very well built. Tim Commerford is using one for its IEM.
I have an Ampeg SCR-DI as my DI rig. Love it.
Why wouldn’t he just use the actual signal ? To avoid a cable run?Really good piece of equipment that is very well built. Tim Commerford is using one for its IEM.
How do you feel about the drive? I heard mixed reviews and couldn’t try one in person so o didn’t order it.I have an Ampeg SCR-DI as my DI rig. Love it.
I don't know, maybe. Or he's using a different gain/bass/mid/treble setting than what is sent to FOH from its SVT stack.Why wouldn’t he just use the actual signal ? To avoid a cable run?
I really like the Scrambler but you have to set the blend to taste. So I either use "more drive and less blend" or "less drive and more blend" depending of the song or the set. I don't like full blend and drive, too much for my liking.How do you feel about the drive? I heard mixed reviews and couldn’t try one in person so o didn’t order it.
I don't know, maybe. Or he's using a different gain/bass/mid/treble setting than what is sent to FOH from its SVT stack.
I really like the Scrambler but you have to set the blend to taste. So I either use "more drive and less blend" or "less drive and more blend" depending of the song or the set. I don't like full blend and drive, too much for my liking.
I use the drive in two scenarios:
1- Always on, so the drive is lower to get that "pushed power tubes" sound.
2- As a drive pedal, adjusting the drive/blend to taste and on/off when needed. The Scrambler is sucking a bit off low-end, so in this scenario I would use the passive mode on my Yamaha TRBX-505 when Scrambler is off and the active mode with a bit of bass boost when the Scrambler is on.
A really good pedal IMO. Good for headphone practice and for minimal ampless situation direct to FOH (I just put it in my gigbag with a guitar cable and an XLR cable, tuner in my iPhone). Being able to power it with a 9v battery is perfect in those scenarios. Many other pedals out there but almost none with 9v battery powered, aux-in and headphone out. I will keep that pedal for the rest of my life as I will always find it useful in many situations, independent of the technology/obsolescence.
The little Tascam GB-10 Guitar/Bass recorder/trainer covers a lot of this for a fairly reasonable price. You can simply use it as a G/B headphone amp, (with a few effects). You can record and loop back. You can play along with a backing track, or song, that you load on a memory card. You can select, loop, and adjust the speed, of just a segment of the song. It runs on battery or external power, AND, it has a built in metronome.
The headphone out also doubles as a line out if you want to run into an external amp. I have one and love it.
https://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/GB10--tascam-gb-10
Ive been looking at the Spark mini, which is rechargeable (and on sale).
I hadn’t seen that one. I was considering a Yamaha THR to practice electric, acoustic and bass. This feels in the same line but connected to the phone. Looks good.
The Mini is smaller than the THR, which is a big deal for me. Apparently it has stereo speakers, too, and acts as a bluetooth speaker.
Hello. Haven't been active here for awhile.
Just was planning to spend my gift card in coming weeks for a cheap bass amp to practice and noodle in the living room and home office. This thread seems right up for asking about that. Currently I only have massive GK head and 60's Dynacord set for recording.
There's lot of good suggestions for headphone amps phone connectivity, but what about old fashioned plug and play? I was looking at Ampeg RB-108 as it would be available locally, and seems very reasonably priced.
I'm now using my HX Effects with the BDDI model as my main ampless rig (with also an Ampeg Classic preamp in the effect loop for another flavour) but it's not battery powered.I use an HX stomp right now and I’m happy with it but having a better powered option is great.
The small Ampegs are great for home practice.
Funny, you mentioning this reminded me that my old Zoom H4 can do most of this. I don't think that I can shift speeds of the playback. But I can use it in 4 track mode and monitor myself through headphones. And it has several different amp models with different cab options available.The little Tascam GB-10 Guitar/Bass recorder/trainer covers a lot of this for a fairly reasonable price. You can simply use it as a G/B headphone amp, (with a few effects). You can record and loop back. You can play along with a backing track, or song, that you load on a memory card. You can select, loop, and adjust the speed, of just a segment of the song. It runs on battery or external power, AND, it has a built in metronome.
The headphone out also doubles as a line out if you want to run into an external amp. I have one and love it.
https://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/GB10--tascam-gb-10
Funny, you mentioning this reminded me that my old Zoom H4 can do most of this. I don't think that I can shift speeds of the playback. But I can use it in 4 track mode and monitor myself through headphones. And it has several different amp models with different cab options available.
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The small Ampegs are great for home practice.
I have a VOX headphone amp when I am not using it with the headphones, I plug it into my JBL Charge Bluetooth speaker via a cable, and it cranks and sounds fantastic. I do the same with my iRig setup and my iPad. FWIW, bootleg iRig connectors are $5 on Aliexpresss.