1st Envelope Filter and Tone Shaping Effects. These include Auto Wahs and Wah pedals. These effects rely on the dynamics of your guitar tone and should be the first thing you signal sees.
2nd Compression Compression can work well with a variety of different pedals, so best to have it close to the front.
3rd Overdrives, Distortions and Fuzz's And in that order. If you go from the least amount of drive to the greatest amount of drive you can get some pretty cool combinations. A low gain pedal can be a great solo boost into a higher gain pedal, but the other way around can often spell disaster. There is one major exception to this rule - Germanium Transistor boosters such as Fuzz Faces, Octavias and treble boosters. The nature of the design of these effects means that they don't like to see the buffer from another pedal at the input. They prefer to see the guitar pickup. So if you have one of these type of pedals, best to stick it at the front before any buffers.
4th Modulation Effects These include chorus, flanger, phasers and tremolos. The specific order of the modulation effects is probably the least important as you rarely use more than one at a time and if you do is more a sound effect than a toneful combination.
5th Delay effects A good rule of thumb here if you use multiple delay effects is to put your short delay before your long delay. Adding a nice drawn out delay on top of a slap back effect can sound quite cool.
6th and finally Reverb Technically speaking, reverb is actually a delay effect. Very short delays combined to give the effect of being in an enclosed space. Think about what happens when you shout in a hall. That's the delayed sound of your voice bouncing of the walls. Leaving this effect till last works well with many different combinations including clean and dirty sounds.
Again find the sounds and combinations that work for you. |
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Tip 2. What causes popping in amplifiers? Have you ever noticed a pop when you change pick-ups, or turning on any true bypass effect switch? Most of the time, this can be explained by what is called a D.C. input offset. What does that mean? It's basically when your amplifier input which should be sitting at 0 volts has drifted to a different level. When your guitar is plugged in and playing normally, the input is given a ground reference and everything works great, but when you break the circuit, even for a fraction of a second like selecting pickups, or with true bypass switching, that voltage drifts back up to a different level. The pop sound is when the circuit is reconnected and the voltage comes back down to ground with a THUD!
So what can be done about it? There are a few things, so here's a few to try. Measure to see if it is on the input of the amp. Plug a normal guitar lead into the input and see if you can measure any DC voltage between tip and ground. If it reads anything other than zero that could be a big part of your problem. You may need to look at the valves or the filter caps in the amp.
On pedals you can use a pull down resistor on the switch so the there is always a reference to ground which helps enormously but be careful of the value, you don't want to effect the tone of the pedal. Most people use a 1 meg resistor with good results. The resistor goes from the output of the switch to ground. HOWEVER, if there is leaking DC on the input of the amp you may find it very difficult to solve this problem even with a pull down resistor on pedal. If this is the case make sure you get a qualified tech to look at the amp.
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