Heavyplayer
Experienced
What is the low feq of this cab? And any chance of adding that to the release notes from here on out maybe?
Would be awesome!
Would be awesome!
It's around 108hz on this cab with about 4,8dB of resonance and a pretty sharp Q.What is the low feq of this cab? And any chance of adding that to the release notes from here on out maybe?
Would be awesome!
Hope is a Vox AC30, I agree with the other chap, no more mesa please!! hahahaThank you buddy! Yeah I'm right there with you.. if only there was a way to make good IR's fast then I'd do it but it definitely pays off doing them properly. I'll start working on the next Cab Pack hopefully this week... what it is... will be a surprise.
"That's a very interesting point of view. I will have to give it some thought."""at some point""
That range where the peak is at is actually on some other speakers as well. Even some V30s have that if you pull the mic all the way to the side. It doesn't automatically sound bad just like you said. After all the T75 is the Yngwie speaker. I assume the list of things that he likes is not too long but this speaker is on it. Also Marshall still comes stock with the T75s.Hey Mikko,
Thank you for considering the wishes of your customers!
I know what you mean about the T75‘s „nasty ice pick high end“. Yes, it may sound strange and unpleasant to the modern progressive (no, I refuse to mention the D word) metal player, but it definitely has its own character. And that slightly unpleasant, sort of acquired taste element is exactly what I miss in modern productions. Every little resonant frequency gets notched out until the result is a tame, bland sound that misses any aggression, recognition factor and diversity. To put it a little bit provocatively: every T75 recording (and there aren’t that many to begin with...) gets edited so much until it finally sounds like a Vintage 30. ;-)
But enough of that. I am really looking forward to your future IR releases. Qualitywise your IRs are among (if not the) the best I have come across so far. And my Marshall JVM JS is already getting hot and horny in anticipation of an ML T75 IR pack (or a Heritage G12H, a Lynchback...).
Cheers
Good question, not douchebaggy. Before I set out to do this ML brand "proper release" thing I actually had a questionnaire open for "big dudes" in the industry. The main emphasis was on the usability side of things. I've never really received negative feedback for anything else but having too many options in the packs. So the common theme for everyone seemed to be that they want to get amazing results fast and not get lost. If it takes too long, the IR pack is not solving the problem for them. So the way these packs are made is to be a perfect amount of options so you can go through them in just the right amount of time and there are "no bad options" so even if you do everything fully randomly you'll end up with a good sound.Not to sound like a douchebag or anything but why are you just capturing one speaker on these
packs and going in increments of brightness ?
That's one of the many things that sets you apart from the others. I still enjoy them, I was just curious.
Excellent choice.So to summarize - it's all about minimizing the time the user will spend searching for guitar sounds and giving only the best options and essentially "trusting me" about what the best sweet spot on a 4x12 will be and giving some flexibility with brightness variations.
I've always wondered what it means Ace & Alloy on your cab packs.Cab Pack 13 USA Bulb
Yeah it was never self-explanitory. Ace was "the quick user folder" with only the best options. "Alloy" was a collection of mixed IR's done in real life by playing around with real mic phase and getting interesting results. I personally hate to have any folders at all. Searching for files inside multiple folders is just a waste of time and people get lost. So having everything in one folder with combining the easy-to-use aspect and also giving the variety in there as well was the idea. The feedback has been really good!I've always wondered what it means Ace & Alloy on your cab packs.
cool thank you for letting mw know!!well i really prefer the best irs inside a folder and not too many irs inside multiple folders,sometimes i get crazy searching for the right IR or mix IR.Yeah it was never self-explanitory. Ace was "the quick user folder" with only the best options. "Alloy" was a collection of mixed IR's done in real life by playing around with real mic phase and getting interesting results. I personally hate to have any folders at all. Searching for files inside multiple folders is just a waste of time and people get lost. So having everything in one folder with combining the easy-to-use aspect and also giving the variety in there as well was the idea. The feedback has been really good!
That was exactly the idea here. If you only have the best options left with some "safe wiggle room" that's much better than having multiple folders with hundreds of IR's.cool thank you for letting mw know!!well i really prefer the best irs inside a folder and not too many irs inside multiple folders,sometimes i get crazy searching for the right IR or mix IR.