Reverb preference
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- Erv Niehaus
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- Kevin Milner
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+1 for the flint - really happy with mine. I mostly use the plate (70's) settings, but everything is great.Brad Sarno wrote:The engineering staff at Strymon think this is their best reverb pedal. Just leave the tremolo off if you don't want it. I have one, and it's fantastic.
http://www.strymon.net/products/flint/
Brad
GFI S10-P Ultra -> Milkman 40w Pedal Steel Mini or 300w Half & Half (or Sarno SGBB/Nashville 112 or '94 Twin Amp or Homebuilt 5e3)
Effects: Cali76-CD Compressor -> EP booster -> Sarno Earth Drive -> Earthquaker Devices Zap Machine -> Earthquaker Devices Grand Orbiter Phaser -> Caitlinbread Dirty Little Secret Mk III -> Malekko Envelope Filter -> Hilton VP -> Pedal Projects Klone -> Tech 21 Blonde -> Strymon Timeline -> TC Electronics Spark Mini Boost -> Strymon Lex -> Strymon Flint
Effects: Cali76-CD Compressor -> EP booster -> Sarno Earth Drive -> Earthquaker Devices Zap Machine -> Earthquaker Devices Grand Orbiter Phaser -> Caitlinbread Dirty Little Secret Mk III -> Malekko Envelope Filter -> Hilton VP -> Pedal Projects Klone -> Tech 21 Blonde -> Strymon Timeline -> TC Electronics Spark Mini Boost -> Strymon Lex -> Strymon Flint
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- Lee Baucum
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- Olli Haavisto
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I tried quite a few stompbox reverbs and delays recently and settled on the Hall of Fame and the Flashback, both by TC.
Good tone and excellent price/performance ratio. And it works well in effects loops, too.
Went to see Bill Frisell couple of days ago to find both Frisell and Greg Leisz using Hall of Fames. That puts me in good company, I`d say....
Good tone and excellent price/performance ratio. And it works well in effects loops, too.
Went to see Bill Frisell couple of days ago to find both Frisell and Greg Leisz using Hall of Fames. That puts me in good company, I`d say....
Last edited by Olli Haavisto on 2 Sep 2012 1:22 am, edited 2 times in total.
Olli Haavisto
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- Olli Haavisto
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double
Last edited by Olli Haavisto on 2 Sep 2012 1:20 am, edited 1 time in total.
Olli Haavisto
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- Murray McDowall
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Reverb stomp box
Hi Guys,
I have a Session 500 and also a NV 112.
Does the Boss RV-5 work OK in the Post EQ patch or does it have to go between the Guitar and Amp?
Many thanks,
Murray.
I have a Session 500 and also a NV 112.
Does the Boss RV-5 work OK in the Post EQ patch or does it have to go between the Guitar and Amp?
Many thanks,
Murray.
- Eugene Cole
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I have been using an Alesis QuadraVerb; but I am open to trying others.
Regards
-- Eugene <sup>at</sup> FJ45.com
PixEnBar.com
Cole-Luthierie.com
FJ45.com
Sierra U14 8+5 my copedent, 1972 MSA D10 8+4, and nothing in the Bank. 8^)
-- Eugene <sup>at</sup> FJ45.com
PixEnBar.com
Cole-Luthierie.com
FJ45.com
Sierra U14 8+5 my copedent, 1972 MSA D10 8+4, and nothing in the Bank. 8^)
This is my favourite reverb that I use with my Webb amp's send/receive. It is superb. The built-in digital reverb in my Roland 80XL amp is more than passable too.
Show Pro D10 - amber (8+6), MSA D10 Legend XL Signature - redburst (9+6), Infinity SD10 (4+5) Sho-Bud Pro 111 Custom (8+6), Emmons black Push-Pull D10 (8+5), Zum D10 (8x8), Hudson pedal resonator. Telonics TCA-500, Webb 614-E,
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- Dave Grafe
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Try again, Gary, I would try to answer your question if I could only figure out what it is you want to know.1. I,m not mentioning any models here, but within any model/module we use, what reverb setting is the longest Reverb with the least amount of decay? Hall, Sring, Plate, etc ?
2. EX. Which setting helps with longest sustain of PSG, if any?
On most digital units decay is determined by the "reverb time" regardless of the paradigm, and no reverb adds to or subtracts from the sustain of the instrument itself.....
On a few Lexicon units (PCM70, PCM90 and others) there are separate parameters for length of low and mid-frequency running time PLUS parameters for low and mid-frequency "STOP" time, which determines the slope of the decay AFTER the running time has expired. This "stop" time adjustment is also the closing time for the gated reverb options. Few other units provide this adjustment and it does make a significant difference in the way the effect works, much more so than choosing "hall" or "plate" on any device.
Is that close to what you were asking?
Yes Dave, you are addressing the issue I'm interested in.On most digital units decay is determined by the "reverb time" regardless of the paradigm, and no reverb adds to or subtracts from the sustain of the instrument itself.....
When editing your reverbs, which module do you prefer for general use? Sping, Hall?
Thanks
- Brad Sarno
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Gary Reed wrote:1... what reverb setting is the longest Reverb with the least amount of decay? Hall, Sring, Plate, etc ?
This question is paradoxical. Decay and reverb "length" are the same thing.
Most people find that plates and halls are generally the most steel friendly. Decay times in the 2.6sec to 3.3sec range are common. If you have control over "pre-delay" which is the amount of time that passes before the reverb effect begins, can be cool too when set in the 50ms to 85ms range. Too short a pre-delay and it makes the steel sound far-away. Longer pre-delays bring the steel itself closer and lets you get away with more and bigger reverbs. I think John Hughey preferred the Lexicon's "plate" sound.
And "sustain" comes from your right foot.
B
- Brad Sarno
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Gary, the black box knob kind of depends on the pickup. When playing alone and going for a warmer tone, maybe back around 11 o'clock.
One thing I learned about getting plenty of sustain was to back your volume pedal way down to about 15% or 20% and set your amp so that's about the right volume. Then you have that remaining volume pedal travel for sustain. It is more challenging to control the volume pedal this way because slight moves make bigger volume changes, but it's good training and offers HUGE amounts of available sustain.
Brad
One thing I learned about getting plenty of sustain was to back your volume pedal way down to about 15% or 20% and set your amp so that's about the right volume. Then you have that remaining volume pedal travel for sustain. It is more challenging to control the volume pedal this way because slight moves make bigger volume changes, but it's good training and offers HUGE amounts of available sustain.
Brad
- Dave Grafe
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The pedal steel presets that I have created for the Lexicon PCM70, TC M-One and Yamaha SPX90 all utilize the Plate paradigms, although I have recorded with Hall patches that were exquisite. The Yamaha REV 7 has a program called "STRINGS" that is maybe the nicest, particularly with the maximum 100ms pre-delay applied. Mostly I use the long-decay Accutronics tanks in my combo amps though....