I got a used PODxt with the 2.0 upgrade at a local Guitar Center this weekend. I had an xt when they first came out, but I sold it after I just couldn't get a good recorded metal rhythm guitar sound out of it. After reading about the new 2.0 firmware, I decided to give it another try after happening onto some jams I had recorded with a drummer where I used the xt--I like the lead sound I had gotten on those recordings better than what I have been getting out of my Chameleon 2000/Ampulator setup recently. More 'presence' and response, even though the Ampulator adds a level of complexity to the sound that the PODxt can't quite match.
The unit I got had obviously been sold to GC by a guy who didn't like the 2.0 firmware, as he hadn't bothered to install the new Model Packs. I am still in the process of trying to upgrade my sad old home PC from Win98 First Edition to the Second Edition necessary to use the USB connection with the PODxt (my first Microsoft upgrade disc off of eBay was defective). When I do that, I will download the Model Packs with all the additional metal-oriented amp models, but at least I have the 2.0 firmware to play with until then.
Anyway, my initial thought is that the PODxt definitely has improved response in its hi-gain models now. I haven't tried to program a good death metal rhythm guitar yet, but it only took me a few minutes with the new L6 Lunatic amp model to get a screaming lead sound that really blows me away. There is still some of the graininess and 'fizziness' to the sound that is inherent to the xt, I guess, but things are much improved, and I think I can live with this sound. Once I've had a chance to program a rhythm guitar sound or two, I'll make some more comments here.
By the way, the effects in the xt aren't too bad, but routing the xt through my G-Major made a HUGE difference. The choruses and delays in the G-Major are about 100 times better than those in the xt, and my lead sound got so much smoother and crisper merely by routing it through the G-Major--almost as if the additional digital signal path and D/A converters provide a 'smoothing' effect on the xt's native sound.
The unit I got had obviously been sold to GC by a guy who didn't like the 2.0 firmware, as he hadn't bothered to install the new Model Packs. I am still in the process of trying to upgrade my sad old home PC from Win98 First Edition to the Second Edition necessary to use the USB connection with the PODxt (my first Microsoft upgrade disc off of eBay was defective). When I do that, I will download the Model Packs with all the additional metal-oriented amp models, but at least I have the 2.0 firmware to play with until then.
Anyway, my initial thought is that the PODxt definitely has improved response in its hi-gain models now. I haven't tried to program a good death metal rhythm guitar yet, but it only took me a few minutes with the new L6 Lunatic amp model to get a screaming lead sound that really blows me away. There is still some of the graininess and 'fizziness' to the sound that is inherent to the xt, I guess, but things are much improved, and I think I can live with this sound. Once I've had a chance to program a rhythm guitar sound or two, I'll make some more comments here.
By the way, the effects in the xt aren't too bad, but routing the xt through my G-Major made a HUGE difference. The choruses and delays in the G-Major are about 100 times better than those in the xt, and my lead sound got so much smoother and crisper merely by routing it through the G-Major--almost as if the additional digital signal path and D/A converters provide a 'smoothing' effect on the xt's native sound.
Comment