NV 400 Settings
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
- John Booth
- Posts: 2036
- Joined: 25 Oct 2014 9:17 am
- Location: Columbus Ohio, USA
NV 400 Settings
It never fails,
I'm at home learning licks, playing with backtracks, my amp setting sound beautiful,
then I go do a show with a band and those settings are WAY off when it comes to
mixing with the live band. I end up cranking highs, pulling in more Mids, etc.
Then I bring my amp home, play thru the settings I used on stage and it sounds like hell.
Any of you guys have this problem?
Any of you have NV400 settings that work both at home and at the shows?
JB
I'm at home learning licks, playing with backtracks, my amp setting sound beautiful,
then I go do a show with a band and those settings are WAY off when it comes to
mixing with the live band. I end up cranking highs, pulling in more Mids, etc.
Then I bring my amp home, play thru the settings I used on stage and it sounds like hell.
Any of you guys have this problem?
Any of you have NV400 settings that work both at home and at the shows?
JB
Jb in Ohio
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GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
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GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
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Do you practice at stage volume?
Do you practice with your amp the same height off the floor?
The type of walls and the number of people will also change the tone, as will temperature and humidity.
It's a perpetually moving target.
Do you practice with your amp the same height off the floor?
The type of walls and the number of people will also change the tone, as will temperature and humidity.
It's a perpetually moving target.
2 pedal steels, a lapStrat, and an 8-string Dobro (and 3 ukes)
More amps than guitars, and not many effects
More amps than guitars, and not many effects
- John Booth
- Posts: 2036
- Joined: 25 Oct 2014 9:17 am
- Location: Columbus Ohio, USA
Good points Lane.
No, at home I face the amp, out there it's behind and lower
I rarely have room to tilt my amp up toward me. That could be a major part of the p oblem I guess
No, at home I face the amp, out there it's behind and lower
I rarely have room to tilt my amp up toward me. That could be a major part of the p oblem I guess
Jb in Ohio
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GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
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GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
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- Jack Stoner
- Posts: 22087
- Joined: 3 Dec 1999 1:01 am
- Location: Kansas City, MO
I've had a Session 500, Factory modded Nashville 400, a Nashville 1000 and a Nashville 112. I used a D-10 Emmons PP with stock single coil pickups and then the D-10 Franklin (with Lawrence pickups) on the Session 500 and the Franklin on all the others.
I wound up using the same EQ settings on all of them.
Bass +9, Mid -2 and 800Hz, High and Presence 0 to +1.
I wound up using the same EQ settings on all of them.
Bass +9, Mid -2 and 800Hz, High and Presence 0 to +1.
GFI Ultra Keyless S-10 with pad (Black of course) TB202 amp, Hilton VP, Steelers Choice sidekick seat, SIT Strings (all for sale as package)
Cakewalk by Bandlab and Studio One V4.6 pro DAWs, MOTU Ultralite MK5 recording interface unit
Cakewalk by Bandlab and Studio One V4.6 pro DAWs, MOTU Ultralite MK5 recording interface unit
- Bill Moore
- Posts: 2099
- Joined: 5 Jun 2000 12:01 am
- Location: Manchester, Michigan
I think it just comes with the territory. At home, you have a nice even track to play along with. On stage, with drums, bass and a loud guitar in your ears, if you want to hear yourself, you need less bass, more mids and treble. You need to be in a different frequency range then the other instruments. Lots of bassists and guitars don't get this, they will set their amp with much bass and cut the mids too much. That just muddies up the sound, and makes it harder for everyone to hear themselves.
- John Booth
- Posts: 2036
- Joined: 25 Oct 2014 9:17 am
- Location: Columbus Ohio, USA
Jack, I just tried these setting and it does sound great with the amp aimed at me.Jack Stoner wrote:I
I wound up using the same EQ settings on all of them.
Bass +9, Mid -2 and 800Hz, High and Presence 0 to +1.
I guess I need to get my amp off the floor at the shows so I'm not playing directly at my ass.
Remember the old days when you had more stage room to work with? I miss that.
JB
Jb in Ohio
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GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
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GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
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- Dick Sexton
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- Earnest Bovine
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Re: NV400/NV112 settings
Danger ! Danger! Earthquake! Power suck! Speaker replacement!Dick Sexton wrote:
- John Booth
- Posts: 2036
- Joined: 25 Oct 2014 9:17 am
- Location: Columbus Ohio, USA
That's one of the things I did, and it did help. But when I got the amp home it was uncomfortably bright. I have to wonder if I was hurtin people's ears all night.John Peay wrote:Try that bright pull switch, John, I've found it useful in some stage situations, giving some edge to cut through the mix.
I think aiming it better will help some, and the bright switch does cut thru the mix better, speciall since the drummer thinks he needs his drums mic'd in these small clubs. Or maybe I'm just becoming an old fogey
Thanks guys
JB
Jb in Ohio
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GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
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GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
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- chris ivey
- Posts: 12703
- Joined: 8 Nov 1998 1:01 am
- Location: california (deceased)
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- Posts: 267
- Joined: 8 Oct 2007 1:16 pm
- Location: Pikeville, North Carolina
NV 400 settings
I always play, practice or show, with my amp behind me. it's always elevated. Lately, I tilt it back enough not to offend the front row. My two gains, pre and post, are both on 3. The rest are set on +3, including the reverb. I use the Carbon Copy delay for a little "slap back." My amp is always in arm reach and the venue seldom effects my tone. The amp is a later model NV with the Peavey mod. Oh yea, all this for my Sho-Bud Super Pro. (black) I hardly ever play with volumn over 3.
- chris ivey
- Posts: 12703
- Joined: 8 Nov 1998 1:01 am
- Location: california (deceased)
- Richard Sinkler
- Posts: 17067
- Joined: 15 Aug 1998 12:01 am
- Location: aka: Rusty Strings -- Missoula, Montana
I use a stand and aim the amp up to my ears. I rarely change the controls. What I am hearing is what I want hear. It's not necessarily the sound that should used for the audience. All of the bands I have played with in the last 5 or 6 years, always wants to mic me, because I don't want turn up louder that the rest of the band to really be heard in the audience. Mic'ing helps with that. But I would rather have my amp aimed straight at my head, at head level pointing straight out to the audience. In places that have those small cocktail tables, I will set my amp on one, directly behind. I really wish I could find something portable that would get my amp up and facing straight out. Any ideas????
My NV 400 settings are usually:
Pre: However loud I need to play.
Post: Again adjusted for volume, but normally around 1 o'clock.
Bass: 3 - 4 o'clock
Mid: About 10 o'clock
Shift: around 800
Treble: around 3'oclock
Presence: 1 - 2 o'clock
Subject to variation.
My NV 400 settings are usually:
Pre: However loud I need to play.
Post: Again adjusted for volume, but normally around 1 o'clock.
Bass: 3 - 4 o'clock
Mid: About 10 o'clock
Shift: around 800
Treble: around 3'oclock
Presence: 1 - 2 o'clock
Subject to variation.
Carter D10 8p/8k, Dekley S10 3p/4k C6 setup,Regal RD40 Dobro, NV400, NV112 . Playing for 53 years and still counting.
- John Booth
- Posts: 2036
- Joined: 25 Oct 2014 9:17 am
- Location: Columbus Ohio, USA
My problem has got to be these small stages I've had to play on with no room to elevate
my steel amp. I've played for years with lots of room and could always hear my steel on bigger stages.
Guess I'll start putting the NV400 on TOP of my telecaster amp (old Princeton reverb) instead of the he other way around when space is this tight.
Gotta get that sucker where I can hear it. They always mic me anyway
Thanks fellas
JB
my steel amp. I've played for years with lots of room and could always hear my steel on bigger stages.
Guess I'll start putting the NV400 on TOP of my telecaster amp (old Princeton reverb) instead of the he other way around when space is this tight.
Gotta get that sucker where I can hear it. They always mic me anyway
Thanks fellas
JB
Jb in Ohio
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GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
..................................
..................................
GFI S10 Ultra, Telecaster, a Hound Dog, and an Annoyed Wife
..................................
- Richard Sinkler
- Posts: 17067
- Joined: 15 Aug 1998 12:01 am
- Location: aka: Rusty Strings -- Missoula, Montana