It's an Axe-FX II improvement. All else will be revealed soon... .
It's an Axe-FX II improvement. All else will be revealed soon... .
It's an Axe-FX II improvement. All else will be revealed soon... .
I don't think X-Y is any quicker.. you may perceive it as being smoother because you maintain the reverb / delay tails
it you want seemless switching, use two amp blocks within the same preset and set an IA or XS switch to cut between them by assigning their bypass [set to mute] to a modifier
No, I don't really use reverb and delay. The delay is quite noticeable e.g. If you're playing clean then goe to dirt on the downstroke there will be a delay before the patch switches over. It sounds very messy like you have no sense of timing. This doesn't happen with X/Y. And this is with fairly basic patches and very basic changes on the MFC.
Cheers.
I never notice any latency that I deem bad with mine. I mean there are a lot of things going on when you switch and to expect something that is immediate is unrealistic. I'm the only guitarist in my band and we have no keyboards....so if it were an issue it would be apparent in my situation. It isn't
Dropout is only 20-30 ms. If you are experiencing more than that then your MIDI controller is not programmed properly. Axe-Edit does introduce significant latency and drop-outs but that should be addressed with the new version.
Firm believer in the "there are no stupid questions" ideology....
How would a midi controller (in this case, the MFC) be programmed incorrectly for latency? My problem with switching is not only a dropout, but also a weird "verbish/noise" kind of pop.
Many thanks for any help you can give.
Kidding aside, do you guys actually notice while the rest is playing that there's milliseconds of silence between patches?
it's seemless
seamless