wickenspoet
New member
I have 8 pedals on my board. The first pedal is a buffered Korg DT-10 tuner.
I've always heard that a balance of buffered and true bypass pedals is best, especially near the beginning of the signal, because a pedal with a good buffer will help carry your signal through the chain.
Too many buffered pedals would result in a muddy affected tone, and too many true bypass pedals would result in a weak signal... so a mix of both is best, with a nice buffer at the start of the chain for a strong signal out of the gate.
Since I run 8 pedals in a row, this theory has discouraged me from trading my buffered Korg DT-10 for a true bypass tuner like the very cool looking Korg Pitchblack... because I'm afraid that if my first 2 pedals are true bypass, my signal will have a weak start.
Does this theory make sense in your opinion?
.
I've always heard that a balance of buffered and true bypass pedals is best, especially near the beginning of the signal, because a pedal with a good buffer will help carry your signal through the chain.
Too many buffered pedals would result in a muddy affected tone, and too many true bypass pedals would result in a weak signal... so a mix of both is best, with a nice buffer at the start of the chain for a strong signal out of the gate.
Since I run 8 pedals in a row, this theory has discouraged me from trading my buffered Korg DT-10 for a true bypass tuner like the very cool looking Korg Pitchblack... because I'm afraid that if my first 2 pedals are true bypass, my signal will have a weak start.
Does this theory make sense in your opinion?
.