Rumor mill: John Mayer plugin coming soon?

I'm using a Scarlett 2i2. I have channel 1 set to "instrument" and the gain a little less than halfway. The gain meter is mostly in the green and tickles the yellow if I really slam on a chord. I'll try lowering it later.

- Go here: https://ghostnoteaudio.uk/pages/app-inputgain
- Select your Scarlett in the upper pulldown.
- Select Neural DSP in the lower pulldown.

It'll show you +0.8dB (for the 2nd gen, use the interface you actually own).

This is the value you add (or substract) to your interface's input trim at zero. You can use the very trim pot for that or keep it at zero and add 0.8dB with a gain plugin or use the input trim of the plugin itself.
 
Is that typical for the 2i2?

Yes. The “crank until it’s near clipping” method isn’t the way to do it. Here is a pretty long ass thread that covers it, and provides feedback on most interfaces.

 
I don’t get the dislike for the Mayer plug-in visuals, looks fine. NDSP have def done worse with Rabea and some others


View attachment 56628

View attachment 56630
Are you actually serious??

1766067154298.png


Your blood is 100% crack-smoke if you think these pedal graphics look anything other than absolute dogshit.


OH NO!! THEY'RE UNDER MY SKIN!! IT BURNS !! IT BURRRRRNNSSS!!

.. fuck outta here.
 
There’s a pretty massive bias against NDSP here so I’m not expecting much of a discussion.

I have no real reason to buy it but the demos sound awesome for that one sound really. It’s very much that bluesy mild overdrive thing but really well done.

Two cool things I see are the triple amp blending which is a unique concept and the post amp compressor which is not common for these plugins.

I’ll grab the trial and compare against the UA as I’m wondering how different that is.

There’s a ton of people who churn through $200 pedals on a monthly basis…comparatively this plugin is a really good value. I’m guessing too it could be the first digital plugin for a ton of guitarists who will now be curious to try. It’s a very different market than the djent crowd.
 
There’s a pretty massive bias against NDSP here so I’m not expecting much of a discussion.

I have no real reason to buy it but the demos sound awesome for that one sound really. It’s very much that bluesy mild overdrive thing but really well done.

Two cool things I see are the triple amp blending which is a unique concept and the post amp compressor which is not common for these plugins.

I’ll grab the trial and compare against the UA as I’m wondering how different that is.

There’s a ton of people who churn through $200 pedals on a monthly basis…comparatively this plugin is a really good value. I’m guessing too it could be the first digital plugin for a ton of guitarists who will now be curious to try. It’s a very different market than the djent crowd.

Same camp here too. Don’t “need”, but I’m going to demo it this weekend. Everything I’ve heard sounds great and the graphics don’t trigger me :ROFLMAO:
 
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Yes. The “crank until it’s near clipping” method isn’t the way to do it. Here is a pretty long ass thread that covers it, and provides feedback on most interfaces.

Huh, this is enlightening.

What about using the FM9 as an interface?
 
Are you actually serious??

View attachment 56637

Your blood is 100% crack-smoke if you think these pedal graphics look anything other than absolute dogshit.


OH NO!! THEY'RE UNDER MY SKIN!! IT BURNS !! IT BURRRRRNNSSS!!

.. fuck outta here.
NDSP is like your scorned lover 🤣

The graphics on that pedal fall into “ok” turf for me. Not offensive nothing to write home about. Considering how many archetype plugins they bring out with dedicated themes they gotta lean into it somehow
 
- Go here: https://ghostnoteaudio.uk/pages/app-inputgain
- Select your Scarlett in the upper pulldown.
- Select Neural DSP in the lower pulldown.

It'll show you +0.8dB (for the 2nd gen, use the interface you actually own).

This is the value you add (or substract) to your interface's input trim at zero. You can use the very trim pot for that or keep it at zero and add 0.8dB with a gain plugin or use the input trim of the plugin itself.
So that link has a link to this YouTube video:

In the video it says that you should set the interface to maximum gain before clipping and adjust the input in the plugin. But @Whizzinby is saying that’s not the right approach.

So now I’m more confused
 
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