YellowJacket
Well-known member
OK, so I don't remember starting a thread like this nor do I remember seeing one so here is a chance to talk about how to dial in different tones. Most of mine are low volume tones because I really don't have a need to crank the thing.
Practice Settings: 45 watt mode. Everything at 12:00 noon with the Master barely on and the volume at 2:30 - 3:00. Gain trim to 'CLean'. With Gibson LP.
Crunch: 45 watt mode. Master at 8:00. Presence at 1:00, Treble 12:00, Mids 12:00, bass 11:00. Volume at around 1:00 to 1:30. Gain Trim to 'normal'. This is for my Godin LG.
Metal: 90 watt mode. Master at 8:00 or over. Treble and mids at 1:00, Bass at 12:00, presence maxed, Volume at 3:00. (Primarily for use on Vintage Hi) Gain trim set to 'Clean'. This yields a very usable clean tone as well as a sick rhythm / lead tone on Vintage Hi. There is no need to scoop this tone since the lows and low mids are hugely phat with the added horsepower. With Godin LG. This is one of my most favourite tones I have dialed in.
Live Cut: This is something my father wanted me to try. I was playing church music with two acoustic guitar and a piano. My dad suggested my tone should cut more so I let him dial it in. It was a lot more stiff feeling than what I usually like and it was honestly a bit hard on the ears it was so bright. Apparently the mic liked it because people were raving about how awesome my tone was. These settings are much more bright, like a Marshall.
Master, 8:00 - 8:30. Presence, 1:00. Treble 3:00, Mids 9:00, Bass Maxed (to add in the low end) Volume 3:00. Gain trim Clean. With Godin LG.
It was extreme but Vintage Lo worked particularly well with a lot of cut in the live situation. I'm just not a fan of the feel and I would appreciate different EQ settings for Vintage Hi for a proper lead tone.
Practice Settings: 45 watt mode. Everything at 12:00 noon with the Master barely on and the volume at 2:30 - 3:00. Gain trim to 'CLean'. With Gibson LP.
Crunch: 45 watt mode. Master at 8:00. Presence at 1:00, Treble 12:00, Mids 12:00, bass 11:00. Volume at around 1:00 to 1:30. Gain Trim to 'normal'. This is for my Godin LG.
Metal: 90 watt mode. Master at 8:00 or over. Treble and mids at 1:00, Bass at 12:00, presence maxed, Volume at 3:00. (Primarily for use on Vintage Hi) Gain trim set to 'Clean'. This yields a very usable clean tone as well as a sick rhythm / lead tone on Vintage Hi. There is no need to scoop this tone since the lows and low mids are hugely phat with the added horsepower. With Godin LG. This is one of my most favourite tones I have dialed in.
Live Cut: This is something my father wanted me to try. I was playing church music with two acoustic guitar and a piano. My dad suggested my tone should cut more so I let him dial it in. It was a lot more stiff feeling than what I usually like and it was honestly a bit hard on the ears it was so bright. Apparently the mic liked it because people were raving about how awesome my tone was. These settings are much more bright, like a Marshall.
Master, 8:00 - 8:30. Presence, 1:00. Treble 3:00, Mids 9:00, Bass Maxed (to add in the low end) Volume 3:00. Gain trim Clean. With Godin LG.
It was extreme but Vintage Lo worked particularly well with a lot of cut in the live situation. I'm just not a fan of the feel and I would appreciate different EQ settings for Vintage Hi for a proper lead tone.