Wormhelmet
New member
Re: Modelers
I tested a V-Amp 2 in GC. It was marketed to compete with line 6 pod 2.0 which I had for years and gave away to my nephew.
It was ok. Like the Pod 2.0 was ok. Its old tech now. If you don't mind old tech, you could probably get either. Getting modelers to sound good is all about getting away from factory presets and fine tuning for your guitar and whatever amplified speakers you use or headphones you have.
I have an RP360XP for hardware modeler and use Positive Grid's Bias Amp and Bias FX on my ipad. Bias is superior to any modelers I've used over the years, but even it needs a little fine tuning which is entirely what Bias is about. Tweaking amp models in their software. The RP360 can sound great too, but it needs time spent dialing in sounds.
The RP360 takes pedals well also.
I tested a V-Amp 2 in GC. It was marketed to compete with line 6 pod 2.0 which I had for years and gave away to my nephew.
It was ok. Like the Pod 2.0 was ok. Its old tech now. If you don't mind old tech, you could probably get either. Getting modelers to sound good is all about getting away from factory presets and fine tuning for your guitar and whatever amplified speakers you use or headphones you have.
I have an RP360XP for hardware modeler and use Positive Grid's Bias Amp and Bias FX on my ipad. Bias is superior to any modelers I've used over the years, but even it needs a little fine tuning which is entirely what Bias is about. Tweaking amp models in their software. The RP360 can sound great too, but it needs time spent dialing in sounds.
The RP360 takes pedals well also.