wastoid said:
It just doesn't seem like it's possible to ever avoid phase cancellation 100% of the time...
You cant. Multiple speakers in the same enclosure, room reflections, slight variations in power tubes, the slightest imbalance of the amp's phase-inverter circuit, fluctuations in line voltage, and more to the point digital fx latency.
All these little quirks and inefficiencies are what keeps our hopelessly outdated vacuum tube technology standing proudly above even the best modelling gadgets.
And now that I have completely derailed this thread, consider this... Suppose you could actually create and record a "perfect" guitar tone with no phase issues, no fx latency, no nothing. And suppose you could capture it at a higher bitrate and sampling frequency than the human ear/brain can process. Sooner or later you're going to want to listen to it, right? Speakers, the room, temperature, humidity, everything down to the cork-sniffer-approved $1000-a-foot unobtainium speaker wires, is going to affect that sound to some extent.
IMO the impact any of this has on the typical guitarist should be minimal. If your effects sound bad, twist knobs and push buttons until it sounds good. Try a different fx unit. Mod the loop. I don't even know where I'm going with this anymore...sorry :roll: