jajones480
New member
I recently upgraded the pickups in guitar to a JB / Jazz combination. To put it in perspective, I was using a set of EMG HZ4s (same pickup in both the neck and bridge). I moved those to my Jackson Randy Rhodes PS-3T (Performer Series) so I could sell it. To sum up in one word... WOW! I believe Tone4Days said, "No, Seymour... No Tone. Know Seymour? Know Tone." How true that is! I never realized what I was missing. Granted, I don't have some spectacular axe. I got a Samick UM4 (pretty much a PRS knockoff) but it has a good alder body, maple top, and rosewood set neck. In addition to the new p/ups, I added another push/pull knob so now I can split each p/up independently. The distinctly different tones of each p/up add so much more versatility to my guitar. Of course I'm preaching to the choir...
My question is this: Do you guys use analog of digital effects with your guitars? I currently have a nice Zoom multi-fx pedal board (GFX-3) and it has more than enough options for me - lots of different distortion patches, reverb, chorus, amp models. They sound great. Do you think that the digital signal processing degrades the individual qualities of the SD p/ups enough that you would go with analog pedals? I was blown away by playing the guitar through my Peavey Bandit 112 (w/Scorpion speaker) on both the clean and distortion channels. Using a combination of the push/pulls and different tone and volume settings, I was able to get a whole slew of sounds out of my guitar that I couldn't get before.
I really only need a distortion, chrous, reverb/delay, and a wah. I have some other gear to sell and don't know if I should throw in my Zoom FX board and get some really nice analog pedals.
My question is this: Do you guys use analog of digital effects with your guitars? I currently have a nice Zoom multi-fx pedal board (GFX-3) and it has more than enough options for me - lots of different distortion patches, reverb, chorus, amp models. They sound great. Do you think that the digital signal processing degrades the individual qualities of the SD p/ups enough that you would go with analog pedals? I was blown away by playing the guitar through my Peavey Bandit 112 (w/Scorpion speaker) on both the clean and distortion channels. Using a combination of the push/pulls and different tone and volume settings, I was able to get a whole slew of sounds out of my guitar that I couldn't get before.
I really only need a distortion, chrous, reverb/delay, and a wah. I have some other gear to sell and don't know if I should throw in my Zoom FX board and get some really nice analog pedals.