DigiTech RP1 - The Helix of it's Day!

Chris6542

New member
1992....31 years ago. Wow. 1992, the RP1 was $500, a higher end, pretty expensive product at the time. 24 bit processing, metal construction, 9 effects at once, studio quality tones, and sleek good looks, it was Helix or Fractal of it's day, and the dream of so many. Even today, it's pretty damn sexy! That was pretty big money in 1992. When you own high end products, you fall into the trap of thinking bargain priced, and older gear, won't sound good, but that's flawed. While I have an AX8, Headrush, Ecstacy, SLO, and other high end products, I enjoy playing my Carvins, Peaveys, and older Digitechs just as much. Creativity is about "unique", not "best". Using an RP1 today is a blast from the past in every way, but it can still sound great if you spend the time to tweak, which is the story for all the high end new stuff. Presets are just placeholders created by software engineers, just starting points. Never judge a unit on presets! I also have the little Digitech RP360XP which can sound amazing, but you have to spend time in the editor to tweak. Playing the RP1 is a real trip, here in 2023. Stunningly simple, basic little menus, only 4 distortion types, though with drive levels on each. It has 8 cab sims, 4 which are existing cab models, and 4 which are blank EQ curves for you to tailor to your desired curve, a pretty clever aspect. At first all presets seemed real rolled off and round, until I ventured into the cab sim utility and setup a custom cab sim EQ curve to my liking, then I had the brighter tonal ranges I like. All of these modelers, even these old units have so many interdependencies that affect the sound, and play off one another. The editing & tailoring menus in this are really crude and limiting compared to new stuff, but even with that said, you can tailor all aspects to get what you want pretty much. It's not big on low end beef, not a very good choice for heavy lowish detuned guys. It's a late 80s/early 90s voicing through and through, kinda similar to the Soldanos of those years being brighter mid-high lead amps. 80s/90s we're all about leads and solos, not beefy grinding rhythms like in the later 90s & 2000s. If you like Ratt, Dokken, and that metal scene, you will enjoy it. Also, the cleans can be dialed in to be beautiful! You can definitely hear the 24 bit quality of tones. You may or may not like how it's voiced, but you can't deny the sound quality. Even just used as a midi controller and for the stellar effects (studio quality), it's a steal for $150ish used today. If you want to appreciate how far modelers have come in 30 years, pick one up, and prepare to have your mind blown. It's so crude and simple, but so much fun to see what a top tier product was 31 years ago. Don't take that to mean it has no great sounds to offer, it sure does, you just have to tweak!
 

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I used a Roland GP-100 for years, which cost over $1k when it came out. It could have effects placed in any order, which was super rare for the time. It was the earliest commercial modeling Roland had..COSM. I bought and sold them over the years, and would like to own it again someday.

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Hey Dave. Yeah, Roland stuff was always TOP notch and expensive, higher up in the food chain than the Digitech products. This RP1 definitely punched above it's weight class at the time. I enjoy Roland stuff too. Quality never goes out of style.
 
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Securb, check out the DigiTech RP360XP, it would be killer for bass as well, with many dedicated bass presets, it's world's more versatile than the RP1, and the XP version has the expression pedal. They go for about $100 used and are the best kept secret to me. It would be great as a capable bass backup pre for sure.
 
Shouldn't this be in " The Pedal Board" section of the forum?

On the RP-1, way back in the day it was really expensive, so my first MFX unit was an ART ECC. Years later, when trying to go for a rack, I got a GSP1101 to be used aith a Carvin V3M rack amp, and the effects were stellar.
 
Yeah like everything when it's done right it can stand the test of time.
I'm still playing my Rocktron Voodu Valve + Peavey Classic 60/60 tube power amp on a regular basis. Good cleans, nice cruches and really good '80 rock sounds.

Was looking to upgrade it then came to the conclusion that I would have to invest a lot of money to have something better (used market is crap here).

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Yeah like everything when it's done right it can stand the test of time.
I'm still playing my Rocktron Voodu Valve + Peavey Classic 60/60 tube power amp on a regular basis. Good cleans, nice cruches and really good '80 rock sounds.

Was looking to upgrade it then came to the conclusion that I would have to invest a lot of money to have something better (used market is crap here).


Ran that same rig for a few years. One of the absolute best sounding of the rack rigs I has was the Carvin Tone navigator. Unfortunately they had reliability issue if you got voltage surges so I abandoned it after it went nuts twice in the middle of a set and had to be shut down and rebooted.
The most reliable and consistent rig I had was my old Marshall JMP1 with a 9200 Power amp. Really really nice rig that i should have kept.
Recorded these guitar tracks in the studio with that rig was a wicked thing!
 
Yeah like everything when it's done right it can stand the test of time.
I'm still playing my Rocktron Voodu Valve + Peavey Classic 60/60 tube power amp on a regular basis. Good cleans, nice cruches and really good '80 rock sounds.

Was looking to upgrade it then came to the conclusion that I would have to invest a lot of money to have something better (used market is crap here).

Recorded this Demo track in my old 8 Yamaha track cassette home studio solo with a VooDoo Valve direct in the mid 90's.
 
I recently remembered a friend of mine had a Boss half-rack unit back in high school in the early 90s. Might've been an SE-70? We thought that Boss was friggin' magic.

The memory triggered nostalgia GAS, and I've been window shopping rack units from that era. So much cool gear out there! If anyone wants to go further down this rabbit hole, you might check out Leon Todd on YouTube--he's a big Fractal guy, but also has an infectious enthusiasm for older processors.
 
I recently remembered a friend of mine had a Boss half-rack unit back in high school in the early 90s. Might've been an SE-70? We thought that Boss was friggin' magic.

The memory triggered nostalgia GAS, and I've been window shopping rack units from that era. So much cool gear out there! If anyone wants to go further down this rabbit hole, you might check out Leon Todd on YouTube--he's a big Fractal guy, but also has an infectious enthusiasm for older processors.

The SE-70, with its analog drives, was miles better than what replaced it which was the VF-1. It was early digital modeling, and it was not very good.
 
The memory triggered nostalgia GAS

Same here, this is my first rack setup a Chandler Tube Driver with and Delta Lab Effectron Jr Delay/Flange/Chorus. Like you said it was magical.

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I still use an RP-1 with a Arion Hot Watt 2 in the effects loop , along with a RP-12 ( controller) and a Decibel Eleven Loop Expander to add MIDI control over some foot pedals .
Other guitarist compliment me for the sound I get at gigs .

I hope they bring back the DOD FX 30 Gate Loop too .



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