metropolis_4
Rock Star
- Messages
- 4,660
Just for fun 
Also things modelers can’t do:

- Look down and see every setting of every effect without digging through menus
- Reach back and tweak the EQ on my amp while playing and not have to remember to save the preset before changing to the next
- Buy an ODR-1 and put it on my board any time I want instead of waiting for years holding my breath with every firmware update hoping one will finally be available.
- Bring the full pedalboard, or just throw a single pedal in my guitar bag depending on what size rig the gig calls for.
- Good wah, compressors, fuzz, and spring reverb (except for TMP)
- I can buy any pedal I can find, or make my own, and throw them on the board at will instead of being limited to what’s in the box.
- See that 1979 Boss DS-1? It’s a real physical device that I actually own, not just a set of data stored on a computer that will be gone when the computer goes.
- When I want “amp in the room” I just turn on my amp. In a room. No thinking, or special settings/knowledge, or special gear required
- My tube amps smell like tube amps
- No graphs or charts to analyze!
- Access to effects that don’t exist in modelers.
- My amp is a real physical thing that has history, and it has a story. It was created by a master craftsman, It’s been part of the lives of many musicians and it’s seen many stages and recording studios.
Also things modelers can’t do:
- Getting to dig around trying to figure out which of the 100 patch cords has a bad connection
- A chance to learn what pedals make noise when chained with other pedals
- Watching tubes flare and die in the middle of a song
- Seeing smoke coming out of an amp when you turn it on
- Teach the importance of keeping a box of fuses in your gig bag


