I've had mine for a couple weeks. I have been dialing in sounds I like a lot. I have been dialing them in with a mix, but my main question is, now I am going to practice and how well are you able to get your sound dialed in at home to playing with a band. Running a mix through the monitors is one thing. Also I am not going to have axe edit with me and using the front panel isn't much fun. Any suggestions?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Axe FX II guys
Collapse
X
-
During a practice session I wouldn't imagine you'd need to do much more than some fine tuning. I'd think the front panel knobs would suffice for that. You can also fine tune using the MFC-101, but that's even more difficult than the front panel._________________________________________________
"Artists should be free to spend their days mastering their craft so that working people can toil away in a more beautiful world."
- Ken M
-
welcome to the fractal club! Normally a little eq and patch volume adjustment is all I have to change from house to gig(but I use pa speakers at home instead of studio monitors). after a few times you will have a pretty good idea of the sound difference from one to the other and you wont have any trouble. The front panel really isn't that hard to use, I know its tuff but spend a few minutes with it at home. You never know when something could get out of wack and you don't want to learn the front panel use with a crowd of people that want to hear music watching.
Comment
-
I am using atomic wedges at home but I have been tweaking with my monitors to try to get a good mix sound. It sounds good through the atomic a (although I will only be bringing one to practice). The singer/guitar player has guitar player syndrome though of turning up way too loud. That is my only real worry. If this was a regular band I would buy him some iem's for Christmas.I keep the bible in a pool of blood
So that none of its lies can affect me
Comment
-
My stuff translates over pretty well. My home monitors are only 5" drivers and the highs are pretty subdued so sometimes I'll need to cut some bass and treble when using my live monitor. But once I started adding 85Hz Low cut and 15KHz high cut in the cab block it's been much less of an issue.
Very occasionally I'll cut some highs and/or lows using the global EQ, but it depends on the room. I set my preset levels using the Utility/VU page. I set the output volume in the amp block so that the VU is just bumping the line. Then for solo boosts I add +6 dB at the output block using scenes. (I usually have a delay and boost/od/dist also kicking in at the scene change.)
Really I treat it like a real amp. Just learn how to get to the B/M/T controls on the front panel and then just tweak it for the room like you would a real amp.
(Hint : Press Layout, use cursor buttons to get to the amp block and then hit Edit. At this point the B/C/D knobs are used for adjusting Bass/Mid/Treble)GTWGITS! - RacerX
Comment
Comment