jjc2
Member
I played the 11R for the last 3 years in my studio.
and even though I was happy with it mostly, I was always struggling to get that "sound" out of it that I used to get out of my amps and pedals.
Tonight hooked up my new (and first) axe fx and started on preset 000. (After upgrading firmware to q7.02).
4 hours and 8 scenes later, I was still on preset 0. Had tried it with 4 different guitars, and it was just amazing. The difference is notable. 59 bassman on the eleven rack was good, but here I was blown away.
Sorry to sound like a noob, but if anyone is still hesitating, don't!
They say the axe fx is hard to learn, because there is so much depth, but for a Newby who just started with it I was able to dial in so much tone immediately, which would have taken me hours on the 11R. (Or on amps and pedal boards, try changes those during a gig) and here I can even dial in stuff that on a real amp requires a soldering iron.
In one word awesome. So glad I finally made the investment.
and even though I was happy with it mostly, I was always struggling to get that "sound" out of it that I used to get out of my amps and pedals.
Tonight hooked up my new (and first) axe fx and started on preset 000. (After upgrading firmware to q7.02).
4 hours and 8 scenes later, I was still on preset 0. Had tried it with 4 different guitars, and it was just amazing. The difference is notable. 59 bassman on the eleven rack was good, but here I was blown away.
Sorry to sound like a noob, but if anyone is still hesitating, don't!
They say the axe fx is hard to learn, because there is so much depth, but for a Newby who just started with it I was able to dial in so much tone immediately, which would have taken me hours on the 11R. (Or on amps and pedal boards, try changes those during a gig) and here I can even dial in stuff that on a real amp requires a soldering iron.
In one word awesome. So glad I finally made the investment.