erickompositör72
Well-known member
EDIT: I've found I actually don't need to use a pedal to achieve what I wanted. There is an update to all of this in the thread I linked below.
I'm wondering if anyone has a go-to pedal they put in their IIb (or in front; whatever works better) to just slightly push the IIb's lead sound into IIC+ liquidy territory.
With the IIb's I've owned, I found the note bloom was just as beautiful as the IIC+, but the liquidy factor was not quite there (whether loop-mod'd or not). From what I know of the IIC+ circuit, as compared to the IIb, it increases the gain/saturation a bit, which seems to create that liquid sound. I'm actually fairly confident that, with the right pedal, I can get a liquidy sound similar enough to the IIC+ to satisfy myself.
Anyone have experience with this? I should add, I'm not going for a metal-type rhythm sound- I'm trying to recreate a sweet, liquidy IIC+ tone when the lead drive is around 7-8. Petrucci-esque, but slightly less saturated and less scooped.
I'm wondering if anyone has a go-to pedal they put in their IIb (or in front; whatever works better) to just slightly push the IIb's lead sound into IIC+ liquidy territory.
With the IIb's I've owned, I found the note bloom was just as beautiful as the IIC+, but the liquidy factor was not quite there (whether loop-mod'd or not). From what I know of the IIC+ circuit, as compared to the IIb, it increases the gain/saturation a bit, which seems to create that liquid sound. I'm actually fairly confident that, with the right pedal, I can get a liquidy sound similar enough to the IIC+ to satisfy myself.
Anyone have experience with this? I should add, I'm not going for a metal-type rhythm sound- I'm trying to recreate a sweet, liquidy IIC+ tone when the lead drive is around 7-8. Petrucci-esque, but slightly less saturated and less scooped.