RVA
Ambassador
It does not work for the misses. I still I have not told her about the guitar I bought last night. Yikes!!!You're gonna need a bigger room soon.
Either that or let it all spill out into the rest of the house.
Works for me.
It does not work for the misses. I still I have not told her about the guitar I bought last night. Yikes!!!You're gonna need a bigger room soon.
Either that or let it all spill out into the rest of the house.
Works for me.
I solved this problem by getting amps that simply don't need a pedal to go balls-out. I flipped dirt boxes for 30 years but nothing at any price compares to a good tube amp with it's own ample grit for responsiveness and quality of tone. IMO of course. And I do still use a clean boost in front of the amps to give them a kick in the stones.
It does not work for the misses. I still I have not told her about the guitar I bought last night. Yikes!!!
That's my approach, too. I do use a Tubescreamer to put a little hair on the clean channel if I'm looking for something between clean and the distortion of my high gain channel. Plus, I'll use the Tubescreamer to saturate the high gain channel a little more, if necessary. Though, usually when using full-on distortion, I just use the high gain channel.
So, I essentially end up with four different gain structures: Clean, Clean plus Tubescreamer, Distortion, and Distortion plus Tubescreamer. But, the essential nature of the distortion comes from the amp, itself.
The constant hunt for distortion pedals got a little old.
Be careful with those ear drums RobertI seldom use my "green" channel. I usually run about 1/2 gain on my DSL40C with my current band, but what I have found is my signature tone is only possible at very high volume.
Be careful with those ear drums Robert
FWIW-Tracii Guns runs his entire pedal train the the FX loop on any amp with a loop. He doesn't even plug into the front of the amp.
Notice no cable into the input of the amps
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I'm not smart enough to change what i been doing for years....Gee whiz, fellows, I've never used my effects loop....seriously.


Robert, I can relate!
I do what I do, for the most part.
I am not a fan of multi channel amps or effects loops. Give me a simple amp and I will work the rest out. Love my 2204, love my Champ. I have never used more than 2 or 3 pedals at any time, but I make them work. No reverb, no loop, no 2nd channel.
I have become a fan of Fender-y reverb and trem/vibe in my old age though. I am softening around the edges.
I would trade my wah for a Roto Vibe. And I have a vintage reverb tank. I would be open to a DRRI, too (yeah, more than 1 channel, I know, I know).
So, out of curiosity, what would be the main advantage of running evrything through the loop????
For example, on my DSL40C, I use a CS3/GE-7/DD-3 & NS-2 in that order. I've always ran themin that order because they are quieter in that order and it makes sense for the NS-2 to be at the end of the signal chain.
How should I be doing this????
He's bypassing the preamp and only using the power amp. He's not running the preamp-out into anything, just running the pedalboard directly into the power section. I've tried it just to find out and it's definitely different, but I would not use that method for my main sound. But, I also fall into the category that I personally find that a well-designed cascading-gain tube preamp is a much better-sounding and rewarding tone generator than any pedal. I also prefer high-gain, channel-switching amps so the relative importance of the power amp is diminished a bit.
Perhaps you could try placing your CS3&GE7 in the loop of your NS2. Then put your DD3 in the Marshall effects loop.So, out of curiosity, what would be the main advantage of running evrything through the loop????
For example, on my DSL40C, I use a CS3/GE-7/DD-3 & NS-2 in that order. I've always ran themin that order because they are quieter in that order and it makes sense for the NS-2 to be at the end of the signal chain.
How should I be doing this????
Perhaps you could try placing your CS3&GE7 in the loop of your NS2. Then put your DD3 in the Marshall effects loop.
I seldom use my "green" channel. I usually run about 1/2 gain on my DSL40C with my current band, but what I have found is my signature tone is only possible at very high volume.