This video was sponsored by Skillshare. First 500 people get 2 months FREE membership here: skl.sh/csguitars3 The only 'stupid questions' are the ones you are Too Afraid To Ask. "What does True Bypass mean in a pedals?" is the question for this TATA video. Let's look at buffers and pedal switching to find out. Leave your TATAs in the comment section and I'll make a video answering them. More from CSGuitars: Gain access to exclusive content at: www.patreon.com/csguitars Buy CSGuitars Merchandise: csguitars.bigcartel.com/ Website: www.csguitars.co.uk Contact: colin@csguitars.co.uk
@samueljett78075 жыл бұрын
Dude this series is literally one of the greatest out there.
@BritishEnglishJapan5 жыл бұрын
Here's another TATA question for you Colin... How can we identify where ground hum is emanating from in a guitar - pedal - amp rig.?
@11metalfan5 жыл бұрын
Unplug stuff one by one until it stops is the trick I use
@DarioVarasG5 жыл бұрын
Incredible question!
@11metalfan5 жыл бұрын
@Zach Isley Well I think you're pretty neat! ^_^
@luukderuijter13323 жыл бұрын
That's not a small question to answer
@doublelunch245 жыл бұрын
Here's a TATA I'd like you to tackle: What does Presence do on an amp?
@Asmogrim5 жыл бұрын
Yes! I've seen so many different definitions of presence.
@Patrick-8575 жыл бұрын
Presence is just another EQ. It's a knob for the the very high frequencies.
@danieljensen26265 жыл бұрын
He has done a video on this now.
@evmanbutts4 жыл бұрын
It's an eq tone control of the highs. Makes the clears more "crispy" and "lively" in my opinion
@Mr-Safology2 жыл бұрын
More presence sounds like more brightness. Am I right, or am I tone deaf?
@luismorsa6665 жыл бұрын
Man, I’m speechless, what a great video and a great explanation. I never thought of guitar cables as capacitors (even though it seems pretty obvious now) and the way in which those could alter the guitar’s signal. Keep going man, you’re the best teaching people about guitar technology! 🤘🏼
@stevewallek9905 жыл бұрын
Big TATA: How to adjust the truss rod? Also when and why should you do it
@roberthofmann9325 жыл бұрын
The bass wizard did an excellent video on this topic. Applies to guitar as well
@Kylora21125 жыл бұрын
Dave's World Of Fun Stuff does a lot of explanation when he does a setup job.
@TheCrimsonIdol9875 жыл бұрын
Truss rod adjustments are easy as pie. Generally a neck will have an allen key, or a nut that you turn to correct the neck relief. Ideally, you want just a slight relief. The way to determine this is to fret the first fret with your pointer finger. Then, with the other hand, use your thumb to fret the 15th fret, and stretch your middle or pointer finger to the 7th fret. Using that finger, just tap the 7th fret to get an eyeball for the curvature. If it's half the thickness of a credit card, the neck has the proper relief. If it's the thickness of a credit card or more, the truss rod is too loose, thus you need to tighten it by turning the truss rod 1/4 turn clockwise, then check it again. Go slow until it's right on the money. If it's less than half the thickness of a credit card or more, the truss rod is too tight and needs to be loosened by turning the truss rod 1/4 counter-clockwise, then check it again. Again, go slow until it's right on the money. With truss rods, slow and steady is the key here. Generally you adjust the truss rod if you're experiencing a rapid change in climate, put a different gauge of string on, or any time it's not right on the money. It's never done to adjust the action, action is adjusted by adjusting the bridge height, or the height of the nut. Now, due to the nature of guitars, some have more stable necks than others, so some guitars will have to be adjusted more. Thankfully, either due to the construction of my guitars, or the climate I live in, I don't have to adjust very often. YMMV.
@leoseanster5 жыл бұрын
Jesus, I was wondering for many years why my pedal board sounded so thin and lifeless - I had no buffer at the start of the chain, I was running through a classic Dunlop crybaby wah, and, I had many many effects in between with long cable runs. You've just helped this hopeless man and have given me reason to go pedal hunting again (whether that's a good thing is another question). Great and wonderful series!
@EtherDais4 жыл бұрын
Has your GAS subsided?
@hazrod135 жыл бұрын
Great video ! The tone comparison is very usefull. Damn man, the quality of your content is so good lately ! Not that it was bad before but I feel like besoming a patreon was the best choice I could have made.
@ScienceofLoud5 жыл бұрын
Patreon support is really helping me to raise my game. I'm very thankful for all the love you and the others show.
@lulz715 жыл бұрын
Been a fan of this channel for years now. Best guitar gear videos on the internet!
@Yanthungbemo5 жыл бұрын
Your graphical presentation makes understanding really easy! 👍
@legoharry1005 жыл бұрын
I usually go Tuner/buffer - Compressor and drives - noise gate - another buffer - amp - FX send/buffer - delays and reverbs - buffer/FX return. So 4 buffers in total, though I have several pedals that are buffered so it’s closer to like 7 buffers and 13 true bypass.
@fairguinevere6665 жыл бұрын
This is why I love the polytune 3. Buffered bypass (if ya want it, Ofc) that sounds killer, and it's just a good tuner. I think it's basically the bona-fide buffer stuffed into a polytune, but it's cheaper and smaller than using both.
@thezerb5 жыл бұрын
Great video. The issue with cable runs, pedalboards and Buffers is one of the primary reasons (together with noise concerns) that I switched to EMGs for live use. Because as an active Pickup, they basically have a decent to high quality buffer inside the pickup itself in the form of the preamp ;)
@williamkeys25965 жыл бұрын
Bro. I never thought cable length would make such a huge difference in tone and that I've been so wrong about non bypass pedals for so long!! Mind.... Blown
@markhammer6435 жыл бұрын
Historically, stompswitches that could *completely* bypass an effect circuit were rare, and bloody expensive. In the pre-internet days, I was regularly paying $20 for a DPDT footswitch...if and when I could find them. Major manufacturers in the 1970s used SPDT switches in their pedals. These would leave the input of the circuit always connected to the input jack of the pedal, and the footswitch simply took its signal from the output of the circuit board or the input jack. If you were using a single pedal, that wasn't a huge problem. But if you were using more than one pedal, all the input terminating resistances of however many pedals you were using were placed in parallel, providing significantly more loading. Consider that one pedal with a 470k resistor to ground at its input would likely provide less signal degradation than the cable being used. Put four similar such pedals - all "bypassed" with an SPDT switch - in your signal path, however, and that 470k drops down to 117k, and significant signal loss. As well, with but a single pedal, it was easy to keep track of whether it was "on" or not; no status LED required. Boss addressed all of these challenges with electronic switching that could provide indicator LEDs, and something close to full bypass, inexpensively, reliably, and without requiring new technology. As it turned out, many of the pedals they were becoming well-known for used the mixing of dry and wet signals to produce the "effect" (chorus, flanger, delay, phaser), and only required lifting/blocking the wet signal to make the effect go away. It wasn't "bypassed" so much as cancelled. Much of the pedal's circuitry still remained in the signal path. Again, though, if you only had one or two such pedals, it wasn't a big deal. Stack a dozen of these things in series, though, and the hiss and treble loss starts to add up. In the mid-'90s, Mike Fuller, of Fulltone pedals, began getting custom switches made for him and his pedal line. Instead of having only 2 sets of contacts (DPDT), these had three (3PDT). The first two were used to completely bypass the circuit board, eliminating any unintended loading concerns, and the third was used to switch an LED on and off so you could tell at a glance which of the 15 pedals on your board were engaged. These have since become standard, easily available from many sources, and relatively cheap. As Colin correctly alludes to, such switches eliminated the signal-degrading effect that the pedal-circuits themselves might create by loading. However, they did not eliminate the potential signal-degrading effect of all that cable from your guitar to pedalboard, from pedal-to-pedal, and pedalboard to amp. The recommendation to stick a decent buffer as the first thing your guitar sees before anything else is a sound one, and sage advice. But consider that some artists have used loading in a productive manner over the years. One of our favourites - Jimi Hendrix - was known to have used a "curly cord" from his guitar to his pedals. These cables were notorious for eating up high end, due to their high cable capacitance. Jimi used Marshall amps for the most part, and though he used a bright guitar and a bright amplifier, his tone was never strident or shrill, but strong and clear. To some extent it was his productive use of loading that enabled his signature sound. I don't mention this to suggest that use of a cheap curly cable will make you sound like the esteemed Mr. H. Rather, consider loading, and "unloading", to be sonic tools that one applies in the context of the overall signal chain, to achieve a desired outcome. True bypass is not a complete solution, but rather something that lets the user say "OK, I don't have to worry about *that* ". Your a good explainer, Colin. I tip my tam to you.
@stuartbowlerwell28455 жыл бұрын
It's so nice hearing the r in buffered and weird. I love our accent. Great vid!!!
@chuckelator5 жыл бұрын
As always, great video! I was well aware of needing a buffer somewhere on ones pedal board and the basic why, (I'm a technician in the telecom industry, so I'm well versed in impedance, high end roll off, attenuation over distance, etc...) but definitely learned more of the subtleties in the why from watching! And I'd like to say, THANK YOU for what you do here. The better we understand why our gear does what it does, and how it does those things will make us not only more informed when making choices in gear, but i also think it makes us better musicians. 🤘
@SpencerDamned5 жыл бұрын
Love your channel, love this series. Keep on keeping on!!
@hearpalhere5 жыл бұрын
Another great video and the first I've seen where someone actually explains what the buffer does. Most people use circular definition to explain it and it's super frustrating - "You know, the buffer is there to buffer the signal..."
@huginstarkstrom5 жыл бұрын
I have been playing for 30+ years, have collected and modded guitars. I have watched some of your Videos thinking "yeah, I know that" (not saying they are bad Videos, just I knew that stuff already. But this time, I learnt something - apparently one can teach an old horse a new trick :)
@migdonalds5 жыл бұрын
i love you for adding a timer on the promotion, makes it so much easier to skip
@ScienceofLoud5 жыл бұрын
People complain way less about the ads when it's there. I do try to make the ads entertaining so that they are worth watching too.
@migdonalds5 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceofLoud but it says alot about how you care about viewers that you'd add it. underrated!
@bpabustan5 жыл бұрын
I have already watched your buffer video some time ago but this refresher video is a welcome addition. The reason I am quite "obsessed" with buffer vs. true bypass is because of the pedalboard I am currently designing. I am in a band who plays Sinatra to Metallica in the same night and sometimes in the same set. And one of the things that bug me big time is when I play clean my treble is almost gone. That being said my pedalboard is about to have 16 pedals in it! And though some are true bypass, many are buffered. And different brands (BOSS, Ibanez, Visual Sound, MXR and Line 6) that have different buffer design then you have a big tone suck. I am now thinking how do I go about it. Thanks again Colin!
@BrandenTheTroll5 жыл бұрын
Best educational content on tech. Straight and to the point. Thank you ❤️
@Umbrellas05 жыл бұрын
That example of tone with and without the buffer pedal was insane. I don't have the best speakers, but I couldn't hear the 1st string at all until the buffer was engaged.
@patrickmkiv5 жыл бұрын
Interesting. I have always noticed the change in tone using a Dunlop Crybaby when switched off but actually prefer this altered tone to the clean signal and often plug the pedal in just for that reason. To me it sounds s bit more bassy and full.
@tomaszmazurek645 жыл бұрын
Besides the tone loss a problem with badly implemented buffers can be noise. Famously cheap Behringer effects have a big problem with noisy buffers. And while in some situations that's not a big deal, in other (before a high gain pedal/amp) it makes those pedals almost useless. That's why a change to true bypass in TC Electronics edition of those effects was a welcome one. Also, there is one more type of non-true-bypass and that's something I would call a digital bypass. If the effect is digital (like most reverbs and delays) the cheapest way to implement bypass is to just tell the processor to not do any processing and just pass the data straight from the AD converter to the DA converter. This has the inevitable effect of adding quantization noise and jitter to the signal, which for low quality converters, like those found in cheaper effects, can be quite significant. So again, for cheap digital effects having true bypass might be quite important, if the alternative is the digital bypass.
@NathanielAbernathy5 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the explanations of these concepts. I look at the buffer/true bypass as guidelines to a good starting point and are great "pressure" points when troubleshooting issues. Ultimately, if you like the tone you get from your pedalboard, then the types of pedals and the signal chain is moot until you make a change. Good stuff.
@mustyguitar5 жыл бұрын
oh man i love this guy! he knows like everything, and everything he knows is true... keep em comin my good friend!
@uhhkonichiwa...3 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I needed
@edwardfanboy5 жыл бұрын
Cables don't just have capacitance between signal and ground, they also have series inductance in each wire, which further reduces treble.
@tyschuby5 жыл бұрын
Awesome video Colin! I often wondered how the buffer really effects the over all sound and the part showing the wha pedal really explained a lot about my old rig. Great content!
@Rollermanfromspace5 жыл бұрын
What is phasing? Like what does in and out of phase mean when you rotate pickups and wire them backwards?
@froggore524 жыл бұрын
I have a question. What "problem" is true bypass trying to solve? If buffering is a good thing (when it's done well) then why would bypassing it be inherently advantageous? You'd think a pedal with buffered bypass could be marketed as "effect + buffer in one pedal!".
@4142Wilb5 жыл бұрын
TATA: What really brings the dynamics to an amps overdrive tone - pricey preamp tubes & pricey power tubes or just the amps internal production?
@brianmesser42205 жыл бұрын
What is meant by the phrase "tight" when describing a tone. I've heard it used to describe the lows specifically or to the guitar tone as a whole.
@Patrick-8575 жыл бұрын
Usually it means a low end roll off. But it means nothing in a technical sense. What they mean is it is has definition and punchy dynamics. It means you can get good chugs out of it, without the low notes going all farty or flubby.
@ashtonbrown815 жыл бұрын
TC: We use high quality bypass and analog dry though to keep your tone safe! Boss: Buffers are cheaper 🤷🏾♂️🤷🏾♂️🤷🏾♂️
@danieljensen26265 жыл бұрын
For reference, those "expensive" switches cost like 30 cents even when not buying them in bulk. But that is a good deal more than resistors or other parts you can get for fractions of a cent.
@editorrbr21075 жыл бұрын
Really glad you played some illustrative comps. As always, it’s better to show than to tell. Thanks!
@tyschuby5 жыл бұрын
A TaTa for you Colin, what are the main differences between different magnets in guitar pickups? Ceramic, Alnico, ect.
@nicksregor42085 жыл бұрын
Great info! I would ad that: If the total length of your cables + the internal wiring inside several true-bypass pedals (which I assume you could approximate to roughly 5-7 inches each) is less than 30 or so feet, then you're fine without a buffer. So cool that you had an 85ft cable to use as a demonstration! Next subject idea: How to reduce 120 cycle hum and RF interference from pedals who's manufacturers decided to be cheap or stupid & didn't include RF rejection/power-supply filtering!
@jepatawaran5 жыл бұрын
Hi Colin. I just want to say that you have great and awesome videos especially the TATA series. I love guitar and pedals and through your videos, i'm learning so many things. Thanks a lot! From Philippines
@martinclayton72605 жыл бұрын
How does a wireless system effect this?
@theajprentice5 жыл бұрын
Could you do an episode about grounding and when to use ground lifting? There is a lot of incorrect and potentially dangerous advice regarding this issue on the internet!
@SalemSick5 жыл бұрын
Great video, as usual, Colin. Thanks!
@MrBerUa5 жыл бұрын
What's that about Fuzzes and Buffers? I know they don't play well together, but I want to understand why.
@DeadmanDance5 жыл бұрын
Impedance! Impedance mismatch. Ohms. Going crazy with these!
@jorge.az075 жыл бұрын
I'm sick of hearing the word "True Bypass" everywhere,and tone snobs claiming that if a pedal isn't true bypass it's automatically a piece of crap BUT YOUR VIDEO IS AMAZING, KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK!!!
@plumbummusic20515 жыл бұрын
What are flipped pickups? Are they installed upside-down or just turned 180°? How does it affect the tone?
@alrecks6195 жыл бұрын
i think flipped pickups refer to how Hendrix play left handed with right handed guitars... it's installed 180° thus makes lighter strings sound darker, vice versa to heavier strings
@alanredversangel5 жыл бұрын
Not sure how to say it without sounding patronising but you had some excellent examples of tone loss in this video. Well thought out.
@Jimbodaddy745 жыл бұрын
So, with the capacitance of longer cables, it's less likely that you'll be haired?
@mattmanbrownbro5 жыл бұрын
Don't. Mock. The. Accent. It's why this channel is good. Plus the informative stuff.
@TheChadPad5 жыл бұрын
I'm gonna do that mod to my Crybaby! Good to know. I noticed a lot of bottom end loss in the long cable demo using a buffer as compared to the short cable without one. I'm not sure whether to attribute that to the cable or the buffer, but as a rule of thumb, I'd say to keep your cables as short as possible and know when to use a buffer. It really saved the high end, but the bottom end is what I'm all about.... ;)
@JDODify5 жыл бұрын
I've got a couple of drive pedals right at the start of my chain (after my tuner), a TS mini and an OCD, both of which are True Bypass I think. But they're followed by a Boss Chorus which is buffered.
@Insert_Bland_Name_Here Жыл бұрын
Okay, I have a follow-up question: If I have a Dunlop CryBaby Wah that isn't True Bypass and have a TC BonaFide Buffer, what would you say is the best order for those two? Wah first or Buffer first?
@rafaeloda5 жыл бұрын
Binge watching your videos, not only learning about gear, but also, learning cool English accent.
@ScienceofLoud5 жыл бұрын
*twitches* Scottish accent. Calling a Scotsman 'English' is an incredibly dangerous thing to do.
@rafaeloda5 жыл бұрын
@@ScienceofLoud lol, my mistake, It was meant as english language. Not as those bloody sassenachs.
@ChrisPreece5 жыл бұрын
You also can deliberately exploit the effect for your tone. I have an absurdly spanky telecaster that I deliberately want as much treble bled off as possible, vs my Les Paul which needs all the good buffering it can get.
@JackFou5 жыл бұрын
One question I've always had related to this topic: If I have a quality buffer like the bonafide early in the signal chain and then a terrible buffer like the crybaby later, do I still get tone-suck from the bad buffer or is the signal "immune" to the effects of additional buffers down the line from the first one?
@PatrikTerminate5 жыл бұрын
I'm curious about why the feedback of a distorted guitar usually comes out as a lower pitch than the feedback you get from a bass? Guitar feedback can often have a pretty pleasant sound while feedback from a bass is so skreetching that it's painful.
@erikolsen1333 Жыл бұрын
This man must be protected at all costs!
@owwillis5 жыл бұрын
Now that you’ve had some expensive guitars for awhile, do you think they’re any better than the guitars you’ve built? And do you think you’ll keep building?
@loganknapp89054 жыл бұрын
How about the Seymour Duncan pickup booster? It is claimed to be a line driver. That mixed with a "good buffer"... Also preamp pedal placement, specifically Dunlop Ecoplex preamp 101 pedal. Please!!!!!!
@Eruin045 жыл бұрын
Question for another TATA... What’s the deal with standby switches? Is there really a “proper” way to turn on/off an amp? Great video and video series!
@yallevereatenbeans27235 жыл бұрын
He's already addressed this in a video that was called something along the lines of "your standby switch is a lie"
@Eruin045 жыл бұрын
Paul Blart Mall Cop Thanks man!
@turkeytrailhoneybeefarmgeo62925 жыл бұрын
A good one to cover would be valve amps rectifier tube vs diode rectified vs clipping diode what does it all mean?
@pjstraightedge5 жыл бұрын
You deserve so many more subs. Keep up the great work!
@WeyounSix5 жыл бұрын
The way you explained how a cable is a transistor and how it related to the tone knob blew my mind man haha
@ScienceofLoud5 жыл бұрын
The cable is a capacitor, rolling off high frequencies as one side is connected to ground. Transistors are very different things, they are voltage controlled 'gates' which control the flow of current. I don't want you getting those two terms mixed up.
@PearlJamaholic5 жыл бұрын
I'm not too afraid to ask this, but I'm curious why wah is always considered to go first in the pedal chain, and not in the area of modulation effects?
@SuperKomedyKing6 ай бұрын
Even at 53 I am still learning things. Is it possible or worthwhile to compensate for any losses on the other end of the chain? So just crank the treble and presence on the amp and forgo the buffer?
@jonathanwapner62625 жыл бұрын
Josh at JHS recommends a buffer at the beginning and end of your pedal run. At the end, I like my Boss RV-6, and in the beginning I use a Boss TU-2. Even if those pedals are bypassed, I'm still buffered, right?
@victorleong60015 жыл бұрын
Jonathan Wapner All boss pedal are buffered bypass except the TU-3 which gives you a true bypass option.
@icenic_wolf5 жыл бұрын
Nuno has been quite vocal in the past about loving the TU-2 because when it's off, it buffers his signal; it's the first thing in his signal chain after his guitar.
@overvieweffect90345 жыл бұрын
What I've been wondering for a while is if adding a good buffer before or after a bad one helps improve the tone
@0riole115 жыл бұрын
Nice you mentioned Fuzz in this, I'm running Guitar --> Fuzz --> TC Electric Polytune, which has the Bonafide Buffer built in to it --> The rest of the board. The other thing to note, is if the amp is a long way from the pedal board, i.e. in an Amp room when recording a buffer just before the input on the amp can be of assistance. Also, when can we expect more CSFlute vids? :P
@hummarstraful2 жыл бұрын
This is a dynamite video. I watched about a hundred of these and this is the best explained.
@HaroonRahman5 жыл бұрын
Can confirm - SKillshare is awesome, would recommend. Thanks Colin!
@samhoward40565 жыл бұрын
What are the different inputs on some Fender and Marshall amps (Hot Rods, Twins and Plexi's etc...) for?
@Patrick-8575 жыл бұрын
Low and high impedance inputs.
@v0Xx605 жыл бұрын
Why do people make such a big deal about stereo reverb vs. mono reverb (or even just stereo vs. mono pedals in general)? While this seems fairly obvious, whenever I see a new reverb or reverb-type pedal, some people seem to get up in arms if isn't stereo, like it make or breaks it for them.
@jsd19825 жыл бұрын
TATA: the difference between +4dBU and -10dBU levels and when to use each when given a choice (slider switch on rack units)?
@ScienceofLoud5 жыл бұрын
14dBU and use them when you need the signal to be louder or quieter respectively
@JEKAFISHER5 жыл бұрын
So I need longer cables for Black metal, got it!
@AnyDrug5 жыл бұрын
Sure. Everything under 66,6m is not trve..!
@saschaschneider63554 жыл бұрын
About buffers: as an IT guy buffers always equal delay (as in holding up the signal for a short time, not the sound effect, obviously) for me and in my mind every buffer in my signal chain adds a bit of latency to my signal. Is this true for guitar pedals? Does every buffer in my signal chain add delay?
@RonDicken19715 жыл бұрын
Too afraid to ask what is an effects loop? I've seen it on some amps, but I wouldn't even begin to know what it is, or how to use it. Thanks!
@d.u69905 жыл бұрын
I'd have a question of interest: is there a way to build a buffer into the control cavity of the guitar in order to have a buffered output from the guitar? Great channel btw.
@MemousOdysseus5 жыл бұрын
Not a TATA, but I do love fuzz. Could you maybe do a video on fuzz?
@s.e.n32645 жыл бұрын
I use the Bona Fida buffer that you reviewed awhile back, definitely helps a shit ton since I've got a crybaby.
@randysosa76165 жыл бұрын
I've been playing guitar for years yet only now am I developing my ear towards having good tone. Your videos are so helpful in understanding the difference between true bypass and buffered. However when I actually listening to your side by side, I notice very little difference. I feel like I'm missing something. Can you really have such great tone loss that it sounds horrible to play? (Full disclosure: I do not own any true by pass pedals)
@emmaceleste_5 жыл бұрын
More of a bass question, but I currently have my fuzz after my compressor. Should I put the fuzz first? Does the compressor affect impedance like other effect pedals?
@Kevonehits5 жыл бұрын
You said the linger the cable the loss of the high frequencies. Which is clearly audible. How about wireless systems? Do they do the same? Would that be another solution to help with treble loss with obviously the added downside of adding a slight delay between each receiving end of the wireless systems
@ScienceofLoud5 жыл бұрын
Wireless systems buffer the signal, so the signal coming out of the receiver is low impedance. Switching from cable to wireless you'll probably notice the sound become brighter. I Many wireless systems have a 'cable tone' switch which allows you to simulate the losses from cables. Modern wireless has a latency so short that it's not even perceivable to the human ear, so that's a moot point.
@MetalLeo305 жыл бұрын
My TATA would be tuners vs locking tuners and ratio locking tuners. What are the differences and benefits
@brunoromiti77085 жыл бұрын
great content, keep it up colin 👏👏👏👏
@thebamfordman Жыл бұрын
Excellent video
@TheReal_Dicey5 жыл бұрын
Quick question on pickup impedance load. The new Axe I/O interface made me aware that a passive guitar's pickups have an impedance load that can change depending on what it's plugged in to. Is this why some guitar and amp combos sound better than others? If you use something like the radial SGI to be able to have a long run without noise or tone loss (or even a buffer or buffered pedal), would the guitar's pickup impedance load still be affected, or would it only work with a direct run (which could include DI boxes and true bypass pedals) from the guitar to the amp?
@mr.nobody685 жыл бұрын
Teach us all about Wah Wah. Exactly how does it work? What does it do (besides sound cool)? Where did the idea for it come from? Etc Tata for now 😂
@jmjeffries25 жыл бұрын
Here's a dumb question: how different is the dirty channel on an amp from the circuit in a distortion pedal?
@mikecantwell773 жыл бұрын
Appreciate it's a bit of an older video but I was watching TPS's "To Buffer Or Not To Buffer: That Is The Question" video. They were getting themselves in a bit of a fankle so thought I'd come here. Question from your video though... Would a high quality buffer protect you from a sh!te one further down the chain? For example, if the wah was getting a low impedence signal from a good buffer, would it still mangle your tone or would it be relatively protected?
@darrellwestrick21105 жыл бұрын
So I got some advice about putting my tuner last because it is buffered. It helped relieve some feedback issues but I've always heard to put the tuner 1st. Which would make sense with your pedal board config. Thoughts?
@emmanieuwenhuis26885 жыл бұрын
Say my setup is a Bonafide buffer and a Sentry gate, should the buffer come after the Sentry, or before?
@secoger4635 жыл бұрын
Heres one, what is the difference between active and passive guitar/basses.
@SonicX1855 жыл бұрын
TATA Why are guitars made up of different types of woods (maple, rose, Koa, etc.) is it just to make a guitar fancy there for cost more or does these woods effect the play and tone of the guitars? (For acoustic and electric guitar)
@Heamex5 жыл бұрын
Another pedal TATA: what's the difference between chorus, phase, flange etc modulation effects?
@ScienceofLoud5 жыл бұрын
Oh boy, do I have the video for you: kzbin.info/www/bejne/d5bWmaGggJiim8U
@bengermein49135 жыл бұрын
I run my modulation effects front of the amp and my delays and reverb in the FX loop. Would putting a buffer first work or unnecessary due to the pre-amp or would it be best at the start of the FX loop. I use all true by-pass and notice a drop in my high end. Thanks Chief.
@voodooo693 жыл бұрын
Now I understand, my vox wah and phase 90 vintage are wrecking my tone. need to mod them for true bypass.
@seantierson26335 жыл бұрын
What is a ground loop/hum and how do they manifest?
@christopherheadcase68865 жыл бұрын
So the buffer goes first? I have a G30 into an 808 into a gate then the buffer into the head. Is that wrong?
@johnroberts8385 жыл бұрын
Hi Colin, Excellent Video👍👍👍. Brilliant advice, Thank you. I do have a question, I have a Jerry Cantrell JC95 Wah and a Kirk Hammet Dunlop Wah, are these considered tone Suckers? Take care mate, Melbourne, Australia.