Sinfirma23
Member
I have a Matshall SV20H, Fractal has this amp emulated called Studio 20, the emulation sounds the same than the original and feels the same. Then...¿Why i need to buy something else?
if you have a Fractal the only thing you’ll ever need to buy is a guitar and a cable.I have a Matshall SV20H, Fractal has this amp emulated called Studio 20, the emulation sounds the same than the original and feels the same. Then...¿Why i need to buy something else?
This is a very underrated part of Fractal land. There is some also great interaction with the L6 team on their social channels but where Fractal stands apart is the quality of online content. Most other modellers it's some dude in a bedroom or on a freebie. Here, it's Copper Carter interviewing Neal Schon. Different level and way more helpful.I have never run into a problem that I couldn't get very rapid, pro-level help with.
Great list and I completely agree. I would add:I was just having a discussion before my gig last night about this. I have long told people, that the modeling quality on ALL of these units is just incredible and you'll be able to dial in great tones with any of them. So I agree with everyone expressing that point.
For me there are really three factors for why I chose Fractal.
1) The switches and layout flexibility. As someone who uses their modeler mostly in very diverse live situations, I am constantly amazed with how well thought out this feature is. With my FM9, I can configure that thing to do exactly what I need in almost any situation. I don't have extensive experience with other modelers (came to Fractal from an Eleven Rack controlled with an FC1010 and some Line6 stuff in the past), but as I always felt like I had to conform my usage around the limitations of the switches and pedals.
2) The community. Again, I don't have a huge experience with other modelers, but the community support here is absolutely phenomenal. I have never run into a problem that I couldn't get very rapid, pro-level help with. The responsiveness and knowledge of the people on this forum is mind boggling. I can't imagine better customer support than this.
3) Firmware updates. I've been using Fractals for a bit over 5 years now and own two devices. But with the various firmware updates if feels like I've owned 10+ devices. Some of these upgrades are genuinely like getting a whole new unit. So impressive. And because of the community beta testing (see point 2), these updates are usually rock solid and reliable.
FM9 MKIII Bi-TurboI'm really happy with FM9, but I have to admit my curiosity is starting to grow... what will FAS offer to replace FM9?
It's true that since a few years you can get excellent tones even out of very cheap modelers, but good tone doesn't necessarily equate to good modeling.
This is insightful.This basically means that if you have the skills you can make shitty modelers sound great... Or, on the opposite side, make great modelers sound shitty.
And this in turn means that the subjective quality of tones one could get out of a device isn't a measure for amp modeling quality... The only measure for that is accuracy, a word that probably some of you don't like or don't care about, but it's really the only way to tell if an emulation is objectively good or not.
Ten concerts in a row, NEVER had to adjust anything. If you know what you are doing, the result is expected. The only thing you might need to adjust is a low and high pass filter and the level of delay and reverb, and for that you have a global adjustment, very easily modified. And as you said, you have perform pages.I owned a Helix before. Great unit, but I got into the Fractal world during the first run of FM3's (no headphone jack). I've wandered to other things since, (QC, IRX) and kept coming back to the Fractal. Someone already said it best... and I've used that analogy for modern PA systems - You need to work hard to make modellers of today sound bad. Most times, this stuff you could plug in out of the box use a factory preset and you're gig ready.
While I wouldn't say difficult if you're trained on the ecosystem, everyone knows that dialing in a preset on Fractal with board controls is more involved than some of the competitors... but the others don't have the same level of adjustability either. I think it will be a great challenge to bring all that functionality from the PC editor, and condense it down to a format that's going to work on a touch screen display on the floor. There may end up being compromises. That said, there are some pretty creative minds out there. So It will be exciting to see what is in store if they're going that route.
People groan about having to adjust things mid-gig, and with the perform pages if you need to adjust more than 20 parameters mid show, then you really don't have your homework done. I think it looks unprofessional when you're hired to play a gig and you're kneeling down fiddling with your equipment frequently during a gig. So from that point of view, I don't think the ease of use thing is a deal breaker for me.
THIS. They didn’t even upgrade any of the effects (at least is what I’ve read) after so many years. There’s no current match to our Fm9. Quad Cortex didn’t impress me at all either. The sound is very compressed and the effects are nah.I bought a Stadium day one from GC and it has been returned after 3 weeks. Pretty much a let down in every aspect. A lot of hype over easy editing etc. The amp selection is meeger and they honestly do not sound much better. It does not sound bad just has maybe a little more frequency response or better resolution but nothing ground breaking.
Also the $$ is not worth it when a FM9 that has more amps and more (and better) effects for less $$.