hereonmars
Member
Hey all,
I've posted a couple times here in other boards, but just saying hi bc it's Saturday night, I'm in front of my computer and playing some guitar.
I gotta say that of the places I've bought PCBs from, PedalPCB has to be my favorite. I find the PCBs easy to work with. I like Aion's stuff, but the reaaaaally small pads make it hard for me at times, especially when I've had to de-solder because I goofed. From here, I've done the rectifier distortion, emu amp sim and the unicab and I love them.
I play and record direct- I use a Tonex live with my cover band but have swapped the emu out a time or two and I'm shocked at how well it works through the PA. Since doing that, and putting the Tonex back on my board, I can "feel" the latency now. It's why I'm trying all these analog solutions. People say they sound a certain way, and I agree- they do; but I am finding I kinda prefer it.
Mars
I've posted a couple times here in other boards, but just saying hi bc it's Saturday night, I'm in front of my computer and playing some guitar.
I gotta say that of the places I've bought PCBs from, PedalPCB has to be my favorite. I find the PCBs easy to work with. I like Aion's stuff, but the reaaaaally small pads make it hard for me at times, especially when I've had to de-solder because I goofed. From here, I've done the rectifier distortion, emu amp sim and the unicab and I love them.
I play and record direct- I use a Tonex live with my cover band but have swapped the emu out a time or two and I'm shocked at how well it works through the PA. Since doing that, and putting the Tonex back on my board, I can "feel" the latency now. It's why I'm trying all these analog solutions. People say they sound a certain way, and I agree- they do; but I am finding I kinda prefer it.
Mars