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Go Back   Telecaster Guitar Forum > Other Discussion Forums > The Stomp Box

The Stomp Box Effects pedals and their effect on your playing.

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Old July 27th, 2008, 04:33 AM   #1 (permalink)
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no effects loop

if your amp doesnt have an effects loop, does it really sound that bad going into the input jack?
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Old July 27th, 2008, 06:57 AM   #2 (permalink)
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What kinda tone? What effects are you running? Running reverb into a high gain amp sounds awful, but running a delay into a clean or slightly driven amp sounds fine.

YMMV,
Matt
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Old July 27th, 2008, 07:03 AM   #3 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MBradford6288 View Post
What kinda tone? What effects are you running? Running reverb into a high gain amp sounds awful, but running a delay into a clean or slightly driven amp sounds fine.

YMMV,
Matt
can u explain your theory?
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Old July 27th, 2008, 10:34 AM   #4 (permalink)
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Hi,

My amplifier does not have an effects loop. For clean tones, I can use any effect in front of the amp (e.g. compressor, boost, OD, chorus, delay etc.). When I set the amp to be on the edge of distortion I do not use time domain based effects (e.g. chorus or delay). I use compressor, boost and OD and still use the amp's onboard reverb. Depending on how much distortion, I sometimes can get away with leaving the delay on, but I normally wouldn't recommend it.

I just have always felt that introducing an effects loop between the preamp and the amp has the potential to negatively impact the tone. On the other hand, many great amps have them and artists we love use them.

My $.02,

Bob
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Old July 27th, 2008, 02:53 PM   #5 (permalink)
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like a wah or overdrive pedal
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Old July 28th, 2008, 12:39 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WNxCarmine View Post
if your amp doesnt have an effects loop, does it really sound that bad going into the input jack?
Does it sound bad to you? That's what really matters.
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Old July 28th, 2008, 07:29 PM   #7 (permalink)
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I only use the effects loop for my modulation and time-based effects, like chorus, flange, phaser, delay, and reverb. It's used to keep the effects' noise to a minimum.
I plug in my compressor, wah, eq, and my "boosters", like overdrive and distortion "in line" (between the guitar and amp.
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Old July 28th, 2008, 09:14 PM   #8 (permalink)
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Where should a wah pedal be: inline or loop?
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Old July 29th, 2008, 02:58 AM   #9 (permalink)
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Most folks like wahs early in the chain, after the guitar, not in a loop. There can be some impedance issues when running in tandem with a fuzz, but there are ways around that as well.

Running time-based effects into the loop will surely present a cleaner effected signal, but I have to admit that there has always been something about this approach that's bugged my ear. I guess I'm a hopeless old school guy... most of the records from yesteryear that sound really cool are caveman style, effects straight in. For me though, it's not about retro principle, it's the way it sounds and feels, and I have loads of disclaimers... for starters, time-based effects straight into a multiple gain stage amp sounds like ass... the clipping is of the unpleasant variety.

Anymore, I like playing vintage-style amps that don't have loops anyway, but we're not talking triple rectumfrier grind, we're talking light overdrive. An analog delay merging with the front end of a lightly overdriven tube amp has always sounded cooler to me than does the loop approach. Even the very best sounding digitals can yield artifacts at stage volumes, regardless of routing approaches, which is why I've shied away from them over the years. Similarly, I want pedal trems and choruses and modulators with loads of headroom and fidelity, as they'll be ran 'straight in'.
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Old July 29th, 2008, 06:59 PM   #10 (permalink)
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Up until the late 70's/early 80's there were NO effects loops - they were really introduced with high-gain amps and some solid-state designs. The idea is to do all your tone shaping - wah, OD, distortion, fuzz (all different effects and incorrect names often used) and such before smacking the signal with huge amounts of gain, then adding time-based effects (reverb, delay, flange, chorus) in the loop to lower noise levels.

In lower gain applications it really doesn't matter, and we played even modded high-gain amps with no loops for years without any problem.

IF you HAVE a loop, try it with the time-stuff in the loop. You may like it that way. If you don't, don't use it.

There's no "rule" that says you must put certain effects only in the loop.

It seems that fewer amps have effects loops nowadays - again, except for extremely high-gain or SS designs where noise could be a problem.

If you play clean you can ignore the loop completely.
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