Russ said:
Tell me about these buffers you heard about "at the end of a loop to put back harmonics that a long effects loop can suck out".
OK. I have no experience with them myself (you might have guessed
)
But in the March issue of
Guitar One there was a list of tips to get a better tone without breaking the bank. One of the tips was:
"Consider adding a small buffer amp, like the Durham Electronics Sex Drive boost pedal to your effects chain, to restore the frequencies lost as your signal travels through a host of pedals."
Yeah, so that's where the question about buffers comes from... unfortunately that's all I know about them.
So, what I'm getting out of this discussion is that having an OD pedal in front of the amp can be used to:
1) Pump up the volume - by having the gain low but the volume high on the pedal, sort of like a solo boost but with the added option of shaping the tone and adding saturation.
2) Shape the tone - by just leaving the OD on all the time (again with low gain). I guess this is sort of like adding an extra gain and EQ stage before the amp's preamp and EQ.
*You can set a wah for this too
3) Have an extra flavor of Distortion - by having more gain on the pedal and playing into the amp's clean channel. Effectively gaining an extra amp channel. So I'd have the 4 channel roadster and a "5th" channel, which would be the preamp in the pedal played into the clean channel.
*You effectively double your channels because you can use it on any channel
4) Make the amp's EQ more effective - in this case the pedal is doing some of the work in adding gain/saturation reducing the strain on the preamp. This allows the amp's EQ to be more effective because the amp's gain is not running as high.
Please correct me if I've drawn the wrong conclusions on any of these points.
Cheers.