what does parallel do to help this? can you explain?
no i was referring to if it's in parallel, doing a drastic low cut won't affect your tone as much because your dry signal is preserved.
exactly what i'm saying...Low cut parameter in effect blocks like delay/reverb only affects the wet signal.
well if you cut frequencies, you're losing something in that area/obviously. sometimes you have to make concessions.OP here for an update.
I dropped my presets output down about 3db and used more low cut than normal (around 170 for my reverbs). Things haven't been clipping, but I am finding the reverb, especially in 'hold' mode, does not have as much body to it. It's probably not that noticeable, but that's what I'll be figuring out next.
Thanks again for all the tips!
exactly what i'm saying...
if you run parallel and do a big low cut in the verb block, it keeps the reverbrations/oscillation from building up and overloading the low end. your dry signal is kept in tact so it doesn't thin out your tone...only solves the problem the OP was referring to.
hmm, since the Low Cut in the Reverb block only affects the Wet signal, you can get the same effect in Series as well. since it's only affecting the Wet - right?exactly what i'm saying... if you run parallel and do a big low cut in the verb block,