QC incoming...
Enjoy man , honestly it is still pretty cool no matter what gets thrown around here
For sure... it's a great time to nerd out on all this digital guitar gear.Enjoy man , honestly it is still pretty cool no matter what gets thrown around here
I had a chance to spend a little more time with my FM9 with FW8 on it yesterday. I am quite impressed. I kept thinking that I don't remember this thing ever sounding this good and having this much feel to it. I had honestly forgot that I put the new firmware on it last week before I went out of town. To me, that is a testament as to how this new firmware has improved the models.
I can't say I've ever had the privilege to play two of the same amps back to back. I often see people state the tolerance difference to write off any accuracy issues.and the fact no two amps of the same model sound EXACTLY the same anyway - is there a point where an amp gets signed off on by Fractal as being complete,
Are we talking about amplifiers handwired in the back of an Englishman's shop in 1960-whatever*, or are we talking about PCB designs meticulously tested and then mass-produced in Californian in the 2000's?I can't say I've ever had the privilege to play two of the same amps back to back. I often see people state the tolerance difference to write off any accuracy issues.
Does the tolerance difference make that big of a difference between amps? Some make it seem like the amps will be totally different not referencing you but I see the tolerance argument brought up quite a bit and was curious what others think
My personal experience with this is that it just means that the knobs are in slightly different places to get the same sound. The amps still sound the same to me. With that said, minor differences in the circuit or components in pedals can make them sound different at different settings. I am thinking of the OCD shootout that I did with some friends. We compared our OCD pedals through the same amp. They were slightly different versions and did sound different. We could adjust them to get them to sound really close but the knobs were sometimes in very different positions to achieve that.I can't say I've ever had the privilege to play two of the same amps back to back. I often see people state the tolerance difference to write off any accuracy issues.
Does the tolerance difference make that big of a difference between amps? Some make it seem like the amps will be totally different not referencing you but I see the tolerance argument brought up quite a bit and was curious what others think
I'm talking about your run of the mill 5153 or dual rec.Are we talking about amplifiers handwired in the back of an Englishman's shop in 1960-whatever*, or are we talking about PCB designs meticulously tested and then mass-produced in Californian in the 2000's?
*...and named by playing a drunken game of darts...
I'd like to think you're right, provided everybody's being clear about revisions, etc. Randall Smith has made a strong case of this, at least.I'm talking about your run of the mill 5153 or dual rec.
So I'm assuming not much lol
When the NeuralDSP Soldano SLO plugin came out, Rabea Massaad tried it vs his modern SLO-100 and he could dial them to sound very close, but the knobs needed to be in a bit different position.I'm talking about your run of the mill 5153 or dual rec.
So I'm assuming not much lol
I can't say I've ever had the privilege to play two of the same amps back to back.
Not to forget that just because those capacitors or electronics behaved within tolerance when new, doesn't mean they would behave that way 30 years later.
Gettin reeeal tired of you man!Where's my money man?
Gimme my money!!!