ConnorGilks
Experienced
Dude. I never said that. Did you even read my first post? It's #7.![]()
Ah, sorry, I just saw two black and white avatars and got you both confused.

Dude. I never said that. Did you even read my first post? It's #7.![]()

No worries. It happens.Ah, sorry, I just saw two black and white avatars and got you both confused.![]()

Hi Guys,
I'm a new Axe Fx 2 user. Is there a general set of knobs that best mitigate that undesirable top end fizz when I make a chord on the high e and b strings. I tried taming down the treble, and increasing the high cut (negative feedback = 0).
I am using a ruby rocket brt amp. Sounds good through my mesa boogie mark v:25 power amp. I'm using another ruby rocket brt amp with higher gain settings this time with a cabinet G12H basketweave (I Think) but I can't remove the top end fizz...
In general, I can hear this high end fizz on most presets.
I'm using a pair of cheapo Samson Monitors.
Looking forward to your advice.
No. Worst advice.
Guess I should've been more specific. I thought we were talking about an on the fly adjustments which I was always told to use the Global EQ. I didn't mean completely cut 2k. But a slight gradual dip starting around 2-4k and on might do the trick. It has for me at gigs. But I use the same amp for all my live presets so a global adjustment works for me.You're right about the range, but not about the solution. Cutting everything above 2kHz is going to give you a pretty awful sounding tone. If anything you'll want to either do a shallow, wide dip in that area, or take out a couple tight resonances in that range.
Is it fizzier than this?
Wow. I'm hearing plenty of fizz in both of those tracks.I don't hear it in either of those tracks, though the high end fizz in Lifeson's track is coming from the cymbals, which are slightly audible. Nothing really stands out in H-EQ.
Wow. I'm hearing plenty of fizz in both of those tracks.
'k, that's too much fizz.![]()
I agree.I don't hear it in either of those tracks
I wouldn't classify that Van Halen clip as fizz. There is substantial content that I'm hearing somewhere between 3kHz to 5kHz, but whoever mixed it did a good job of removing the fizz (probably with some tight EQ cuts in that region). After about 6kHz, I don't hear anything substantial or poking out in a bad way. So, I'd be willing to bet that there is a low-pass filter around 7kHz. The Van Halen clip also works well with the whole mix and where DLR's vocals lay. Every mix is different. This is why referencing guitar sounds can sometimes be the wrong thing for your mix.Wow. I'm hearing plenty of fizz in both of those tracks.
Like I said, not hearing it in those, but here's a good example of fizz in a rock classic:
Yes, it does. That's my point.The Van Halen clip also works well with the whole mix and where DLR's vocals lay.