O
ozzynotwood
Guest
Hey
How many pedals (with true bypass) can you link together before you start to lose tone?
---John
How many pedals (with true bypass) can you link together before you start to lose tone?
---John
Nono YOU MUST FEEL THE CHANGE!!!
TRUE BYPASS WILL SAVE YOUR VERY SOUNDS SOOOOOOOUUUUUULLLLLLLL!!!
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That brings up a good point. I use a passive TB loop over the whole pedal assembly. So if for ANY reason I want the pedals out altogether, I hit the TB. I figure if the pedal power goes out, or one of the little cables gets crackly I can kick out the whole thing. It has saved me a couple times. But depending on my cable length, the TB is either an improvement OR detraction. So I'm going to build a buffer into it on a mini-toggle, and rig it so I can select whether the buffer is on or off, AND whether it'll stay on during true bypass mode. That's the best of both worlds IMO. I know you said there's little need for TB but I've got an old SD-1 and an Ibanez pedal that both suck the life out when off. Oddly enough, the cheap Arion Tubulator sounds fantastic when bypassed. I'll have to look into the AMZ circuit. For right now, I use Bartolini's TC5-Z. It's flat and clean, but with a mid-boost option so for $30 you can have a lot of fun with it.The only pedals, IMO and IME, that need to be TB are wahs and the orange Phase 90's. If it's got a buffered bypass, great. I would never run an all TB pedalboard. There would have to be at least one buffered pedal in there, maybe two. If you're running only 1 or 2 pedals, 3 max, all TB is fine. Any more than that, make sure 1 has buffered bypass.
How do they suck the life out??but I've got an old SD-1 and an Ibanez pedal that both suck the life out when off.
...it sounds funny, saying "that's my buffered true bypass pedal":laugh2: Maybe that's the next fancy term that'll be thrown around for awhile: Buffered True Bypass :eek13: