the really sad part of it all is as of yesterday I now own a Mesa Road King head, Fender Hot Rod Deluxe combo, Bugera V22 combo, Marshall JCM2000 TSL60 head, a Vox Heritage AC15 combo, two 2x12 cabs and soon to be adding another pair of 2x12 cabinets.
I bought the amp modelers to avoid being in this situation; G'darnit!!
How is this sad? It's about the coolest thing I've read in the thread.
I can't believe there's no SLO.
I haven't brought an amp to a gig in over 2 yrs.
Do you DI from the POD to the PA? Bcause I've heard that work VERY well before..
The JCM800 still sounds thin and weak, just like all the other POD items I've had in the past. Sure you can tweak with the Parametric EQ, but it is not the same, not even close. The edition of the JTM45 is very cool. The omission of the jumped Plexi and OMFG the hallowed SLO---right there makes it terribly worthless to me.
Hi guys,
Guess I'll throw my $0.02 in. I wanted to take a look and see if I could see what kind of processors the Axe-Fx and the PODHD were using. A couple of well-meaning guys already did it. Here is what they found:
POD HD DSP: SHARC ADSP-21369 at 333 MHz (KSZ-2A), 2.4 GFLOPS
POD X3 DSP: SHARC ADSP-21369 at 266 MHz (KSZ-1A), 1.6 GFLOPS
POD XT DSP: at 60 MHz, 180 MFLOPS
Axe-FX (Standard) DSP: TigerSharc at 500MHz, 3.0GFLOPS
Axe-FX (Ultra) DSP: TigerSHARC at 600MHz 4.0GFLOPS
In a nutshell, for all the POD 'HD', the chip at least is just an incremental improvement over the X3. The TigerSHARC is the next level - I'll let you draw your own conclusions from that.
IMHO, the reason software amp modelers work so well (and take up so much CPU cycles) is because desktop CPUs have a lot more horsepower to crunch numbers - more than what is offered in the chips in the Axe-Fx and the PODHD. (although the chip designs are not equivalent - DSP chips specialize in signal processing while your desktop CPU is a general purpose number cruncher) I think the primary reason the Axe-Fx sounds more 3D is because there's more processing power under the hood. IMHO, spending 500 bucks for mid-level DSP is kinda pricey. If their Mk2 version (which will come out in 2 years of course. =)) has the tigersharc, then that might be something.
Although hardware is very important it all to a point. Software on it is equally important in my opinion. Even if Line6 had the same processor results could be significantly different.
I've always thought that the Line6/all other modellers stuff was a case of quantity rather than quality. I've said before that if modelling was so good why not produce a simple amp for the likes of me who only needs 2 or 3 sounds ? So it's interesting to see that the new HD combos and heads (with tubes) are only 2 channel amps. At last Line 6 are putting their money where their mouth is. I'd like to try one of these.