shemihazazel
Fractal Fanatic
Agreed.
ThIngs just sound fantastic.
I can't get over how insanely good the Rectos sound now. On my Recto1 Org Modern patch, with Bright off it's so squishy and juicy. Bright on and it's tight and percussive.
Agreed.
ThIngs just sound fantastic.
Yep. There’s one or two other amps in there.But now i take is how it is and Maybee Kick of the herbie of my presets
Sounds like you already have the answer for you...Question....
The Axe-Fx has improved leaps and bounds over the years. I definitely hear a major difference between the first version of the Axe and software and the latest. But the differences are not as noticeable anymore.
I'm curious if there is some practical limit on how many updates it will take to get to something that we can all call "as good as a real amp." So many updates say "algorithm more accurately models..." or "improved" this or that. Is the modeling currently accurate to 90% of a real amp? 95%? 99%? I would appreciate more quantitative data that that help me understand how many more updates will be required to finally be a "real" amp or close enough that none of us (even the pro musicians) can tell the difference. I can't trust my ears and brain any longer because I don't hear much difference at all. The control and effects additions are obviously not the subject of my question. I'm referring to the amp modeling.
That's the most exciting thing to me! It's amazing to see how it just keeps getting better, and with the firmwares since Cygnus X1 (remember the 'old' Cygnus? ) it seems that each new major version is a major leap in amp modelling technology, not just incremental improvements.As he mentioned in one of these beta threads, he finally solved some issues that have been bothering him for years.
As the title of the thread says "Axe-Fx Firmware Version 21.00 Release Candidate (Beta 7)"What happened to Release Candidates ? I haven't seen anything other that Beta and final version for ages
You're missing his point. We used to regularly see release candidate betas... Now we almost never do. It's public beta(s) then release version most of the time.As the title of the thread says "Axe-Fx Firmware Version 21.00 Release Candidate (Beta 7)"
That is Cliff's prerogative, there's nothing that says he has to follow a particular naming strategy.You're missing his point. We used to regularly see release candidate betas... Now we almost never do. It's public beta(s) then release version most of the time.
Try the emergency boot procedure and try selecting a different preset or loading a different one over the current slot.FYI
I installed this version (updating from 21 beta 4) using Fractal Bot from Axe-Edit and after rebooting, my Output 1 lights maxed out and all sound stops.
I tried rebooting several times and I would get a few seconds of sound before the lights max out & sound stops.
Same issue after reloading the firmware again.
Thanks for the tip. If I switch to another preset, then reboot. It works. Going back to the original preset re-triggers the issue.Try the emergency boot procedure and try selecting a different preset or loading a different one over the current slot.
That's what I was suspecting... Glad you got past the issue.Thanks for the tip. If I switch to another preset, then reboot. It works. Going back to the original preset re-triggers the issue.
I guess the original preset somehow got corrupted?
Question....
The Axe-Fx has improved leaps and bounds over the years. I definitely hear a major difference between the first version of the Axe and software and the latest. But the differences are not as noticeable anymore.
I'm curious if there is some practical limit on how many updates it will take to get to something that we can all call "as good as a real amp." So many updates say "algorithm more accurately models..." or "improved" this or that. Is the modeling currently accurate to 90% of a real amp? 95%? 99%? I would appreciate more quantitative data that that help me understand how many more updates will be required to finally be a "real" amp or close enough that none of us (even the pro musicians) can tell the difference. I can't trust my ears and brain any longer because I don't hear much difference at all. The control and effects additions are obviously not the subject of my question. I'm referring to the amp modeling.