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Here are the problems - firstly if I roll off my guitar's volume I'll get a reduction in gain, not a reduction in volume, I'd have to drop it to below halfway before the volume drops. So that's no help because I won't get anything like the tone I want having rolled off my guitar volume that much, and crucially even then I won't get anywhere near the volume boost I'm looking for.slowpokerhino wrote:Welcome to the forum max.![]()
Unfortunately using the fx loop wont work either. You will get a gain boost but not a volume boost.
Using a pedal to cut (signal path, HB detox EQ) will work but, like you said, the rhythm sound will suffer a bit.
The best way is to use the volume control on your guitar. Set the HDR for your rhythm sound with your guitars volume at about half. When you want to boost for solos just turn it to 10.
I do use the guitar volume to set gain up - but as I've said, I play hot, so anything I do with the guitar volume only really affects gain, and there's no way I could use it to get the volume increase I need without ruining the rest of my sound.Ghostrider wrote:I think you have to get in the habit of using your guitars volume to set your gain up. I just stay in high range and turn it down for cleaner tones and dial it up for rythem or leads. I would suggest using a eq and kick that in for lead guitar, it works very well for me because I can not only adjust the frequencies but I can give it some boost also to cut through. I just use a Boss GE-7.
slowpokerhino wrote:Welcome to the forum max.![]()
Unfortunately using the fx loop wont work either. You will get a gain boost but not a volume boost.
Using a pedal to cut (signal path, HB detox EQ) will work but, like you said, the rhythm sound will suffer a bit.
The best way is to use the volume control on your guitar. Set the HDR for your rhythm sound with your guitars volume at about half. When you want to boost for solos just turn it to 10.
you cannot use any boost function in the loop, that don't work, you have to attenuate the signal for rhythmpoxo wrote:I don´t lke anything the overdrives in the fx loop :scared .I think is better a clean booster in the loop.
You can try with a treble boster in the input.
But WHY? That's the question I don't seem to be able to find an answer to. What happens that;s so terrible when you put a clean boost in the effects loop? Why is it that literally every other amp I've ever played that has an effects loop will enable me to get a volume boost with a boost pedal in the effects loop, but the VM apparently won't? Why have they designed it so that if I want a boost function I have to ruin the tone I use when I'm not soloing?C0ldFart wrote:you cannot use any boost function in the loop, that don't work, you have to attenuate the signal for rhythmpoxo wrote:I don´t lke anything the overdrives in the fx loop :scared .I think is better a clean booster in the loop.
You can try with a treble boster in the input.
so the od in the loop serves to function
1. Attenuate and slap som mud on the crunch during rhytm
2. Disable and get the full VM tones with higher volume
Because its designed to be more reactive to turning your gain up or down by guitar volume, so a volume boost between your guitar and amplifier will boost the gain quite a bit and make it more distorted.maxrossell wrote:But WHY? That's the question I don't seem to be able to find an answer to. What happens that;s so terrible when you put a clean boost in the effects loop? Why is it that literally every other amp I've ever played that has an effects loop will enable me to get a volume boost with a boost pedal in the effects loop, but the VM apparently won't? Why have they designed it so that if I want a boost function I have to ruin the tone I use when I'm not soloing?C0ldFart wrote:you cannot use any boost function in the loop, that don't work, you have to attenuate the signal for rhythmpoxo wrote:I don´t lke anything the overdrives in the fx loop :scared .I think is better a clean booster in the loop.
You can try with a treble boster in the input.
so the od in the loop serves to function
1. Attenuate and slap som mud on the crunch during rhytm
2. Disable and get the full VM tones with higher volume
well VM's have less headroom than other amps to begin with. your using the 2266, which isnt the recommended of the two for clean headroom! so, you can see that its not gonna have the available volume boost (clean headroom) as other amps you may have played! but anyway the following may be the answers you're looking for (the WHY!)maxrossell wrote:Hey guys, new poster here.
I've had my VM2266 for a while now, and pretty much the only issue I have with it is that it doesn't have any kind of straight volume boost. I have it set to use LDR for cleans (although it's not really a clean, just less dirty) and HDR for the big rhythm/riff sound, but I'm trying to figure out what would be the best solution to get a good volume spike for soloing. I'm running the gains far too hot to consider boosting the front end, so I'm assuming that my only option is to use the FX loop, so what do you think:
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