blastbeatdown
Inspired
@York Audio is there a pack you’d recommend to pair with an Engl amp? I wasn’t all that impressed with the Engl cab pack I got from one of your competitors.
That's a tricky one. I've never been able to connect with ENGL amps or models... too fizzy and compressed for my own taste, so I would only be guessing on what might work for you. Maybe the MES 412 OS-V2 or the MES 212 V30? Those are awesome cabs for anything heavy. The speakers in ENGL 4x12s are front-loaded, which gives the cab less low end and more mids. The only front-loaded cab I currently offer is the VH+ 412 P50E.@York Audio is there a pack you’d recommend to pair with an Engl amp? I wasn’t all that impressed with the Engl cab pack I got from one of your competitors.
FullRes means that it can read more that 180ms (I think that's what UltraRes reads), so you can load any Room IR in a FullRes slot to get more room ambience in your tone. Most of them are mono Room captures.Also @York Audio do any cab packs come with FullRes IRs? I love using them for headphone practice tones.
Awesome, thank you! I love the factory full res for greenbacks and Mesa so good to know what base IRs pair with themThat's a tricky one. I've never been able to connect with ENGL amps or models... too fizzy and compressed for my own taste, so I would only be guessing on what might work for you. Maybe the MES 412 OS-V2 or the MES 212 V30? Those are awesome cabs for anything heavy. The speakers in ENGL 4x12s are front-loaded, which gives the cab less low end and more mids. The only front-loaded cab I currently offer is the VH+ 412 P50E.
I have an ENGL 4x12 and still need to get around to capturing it at some point.
FullRes means that it can read more that 180ms (I think that's what UltraRes reads), so you can load any Room IR in a FullRes slot to get more room ambience in your tone. Most of them are mono Room captures.
Packs that have stereo L/R Room captures:
KW 412 M25-SH
MRSH 412 MV30-Dual
FTWN 212 D120
Packs/Cabs used for factory FullRes captures (Legacy Cab bank IRs L192-L199):
VLUX 210 P10R
VX30 212 Blue
MRSH 412 M25
MES 412 OS-V2
You can definately find a solution with the York IRs.@York Audio is there a pack you’d recommend to pair with an Engl amp? I wasn’t all that impressed with the Engl cab pack I got from one of your competitors.
I definitely would be all over that. I’ve been using the Atomica High model with the Blackjack pack for a year or two. I recently revisited the Engl Savage model for the first time since firmware 27 and my goodness, it is filthy. The Mesa pack is a trusty dumb-reach, but a front-loaded cab might be cool. I believe Fortin builds their cabs like that too, and that is pretty much the tone I am after (I was using the Atomica to mimic the Fortin Meshuggah). Thanks for the response!!I have an ENGL 4x12 and still need to get around to capturing it at some point.

Yes, to everything.I mostly use York Audio IRs, so I figured I would start this talk here since it's Axe iii/FM9 and York related, but I wanted to talk tone!
I would not say I'm a great mixing engineer; I do mixing work for friends and some clients and record guitars for sessions. One thing I've learned from mixing is that everything affects everything frequency wise. For example, of course having too much bass and upper bass in a mix can make a mix sound muddy, BUT, it can also make things sound harsh if your midrange is not right either. In other words, the contrast of lower frequencies can actually bring focus to the highs if the mids aren't correct. This can go in all sorts of directions obviously. You can add that low end and go "hey, this sounds nice and full!", but then realize that maybe your high end sounds scratchy or harsh. So, what usually becomes the first thing to do? You usually try to tame the high end. You tame the high end, and now what? Other problem frequencies along with a murky sound and weird resonances get revealed now, when maybe the issue was the midrange. Maybe you needed to bring out more midrange to balance the lows to highs etc.
Now, I'm relating this to crafting guitar tones. I find there is a fine line (for me) between having your guitar sound like a radio because "BaSs DoEsn't beLONG IN thE GuITAR!!! THAt'S wHAT thE BASs IS FoR!!!!" or so the saying goes hahah or having too much low end. I have a tendency to use a little too much low end sometimes, but when I want "clarity", turning up the treble is what seems to happen first, which then results in a not OVERLY scooped sound, but a sound that has the "loudness" effect more so, at least this is how my ear perceives this, which that type of tone is not ideal to me, yet I generally dial in things that way, or tend to over compensate making the tone too "specific" at which point can be difficult to glue into a mix.
Do you guys relate to this at all? I'm trying to be cognizant of having enough bass in the tone because lets face it, bass matters to the weight of a guitar tone; it's important. However, TOO much can make the high end sound more scratchy, sizzly and stiff IF the midrange is not correct too. I find it's a fine balance when dialing things in properly, especially to fit in a mix. It's such an art, and a difficult one at that hahah
Don't get me wrong; Fractal has made it so easy to get great tones fast, but I feel that as an aspiring engineer, I need to develop my ear even more to get that last 5-10% at the source as opposed to relying on that in the mix.
I recently recorded some Fractal AC 30 Brilliant tones with the YORK AC30 pack, and while it worked for the mix in the long run, I think these tones may demonstrate the struggle I have a bit, so maybe I'll post a stereo mix of the raw guitars to hear everyone's thoughts (maybe the mixed version too) and include the preset as well (minus the IR of course). I'd love to hear feedback on it and this topic in general!![]()

What he said ^^^Yes, to everything.![]()
Got ya! The struggle is real!Yes, to everything.![]()
Got ya! I feel like this is confirming my observations in my tone searching and dialing in! I'm hoping to hear more people's experiences as well as Justin's and how they dial in their tones and what they've noticed and hot to mitigate what they don't like etc.!What he said ^^^
What v30 IR is that exactly?I use a 5150 tone through a single 57 IR of a "goldenyear" v30. I've found that to make my tone more balanced i run the mids around 2-3 out of 10. 5150's are mid heavy and mesa v30 cabs are also super mid heavy. Its always weird because all you ever hear is the more mids argument but i feel if i ran it much higher i'd be in honk city. Its also tough because i want to eq with my eyes not my ears lol. Live i run all patches with a lowcut at 80 12db slope and no highcut.
Got ya! Definitely need to listen, which I am guilty of listening with my eyes for sure hahah I feel like that's where I'm trying to balance things; if it's not too honky in the mids, then its too boom and sizzly / whistley city. I probably make too exaggerated moves where all I need to do is one notch adjustments.I use a 5150 tone through a single 57 IR of a "goldenyear" v30. I've found that to make my tone more balanced i run the mids around 2-3 out of 10. 5150's are mid heavy and mesa v30 cabs are also super mid heavy. Its always weird because all you ever hear is the more mids argument but i feel if i ran it much higher i'd be in honk city. Its also tough because i want to eq with my eyes not my ears lol. Live i run all patches with a lowcut at 80 12db slope and no highcut.
What v30 IR is that exactly?
Got ya! Definitely need to listen, which I am guilty of listening with my eyes for sure hahah I feel like that's where I'm trying to balance things; if it's not too honky in the mids, then its too boom and sizzly / whistley city. I probably make too exaggerated moves where all I need to do is one notch adjustments.
I've been doing this for years with good results.I personally struggle with the player/engineer mindset. Part of me wants to have control over everything, eq, multiband compression, high and low cuts etc. Essentially do all the engineering and take as much out of the FOH guys hands as possible. At the end of the day some of the best tones i've had/ heard where an amp and cab mic'ed by someones drunk uncle. Lol if the soundguy sucks well you're screwed regardless of what you give him. Like Justin i think of the real world. When you play an amp and cab live you generally don't care about high/cuts. You dial in a tone with the eq, maybe some graphic pedal eq and then the sound guy mics it. The mic hears the signal of the cab with no cuts. All cuts happen at the desk and are dialed for the room/soundguys tastes. I treat my direct sound just like a real amp. No highcuts with a 100% raw sm57 on a great speaker with good placement IR. The good placement is already better than most soundguys typical 2 second no flashlight mic slap.
To make it easier to find what you're looking for, click on the links below to jump to the introductory posts about these York Audio Cab Packs.
KW 412 M25-SH
MRSH 412 MV30-Dual
FTWN 212 D120
VH+ 412 P50E
VLUX 210 P10R
YORK 212 M65 Cream
YORK 212 DV77
PRNC 110 OX Lite
5153 412 VH20
MTCH 212 ESD-V2
MES 412 OS-V2
HWAT 412 FN50 Lite
ORNG 412 V30
VX30 212 BLUE
FDMN 412 M25-V30
MRSH 412 T75
BMAN 410 P10Q
MRSH M25
MES 212 V30
AMPG 410 HS
VX15 112 Blue
MES 412 TRAD
MRSH Blackjack
Bogna 412
Keep reading this post for more information about the DXVB Verb Deluxe!
............................................
Hello everyone,
In light of the new vendor rules on the Fractal forum, we've been instructed to make a "master thread" to showcase new products. So today, I'm using this opportunity to announce the newest York Audio Cab Pack... The DXVB Verb Deluxe, based on a vintage 1966 "Blackface" Fender Deluxe Reverb with the original Oxford speaker.
You can get it here: www.yorkaudio.co for a low introductory price.
You can hear me play it here with the DXVB Mix 01 IR:
This Cab Pack offers .wav format Raw and MPT files in 96k, 48k, and 44.1k sample rates. Each capture was hand-selected and tuned by ear, resulting in a truly inspiring musical experience with minimal effort and IR auditioning. In addition to the fantastic single mic captures, there are also 10 multi-mic mixes to add more dimension to your tone.
Without name dropping, I've had Grammy Award winning producers, artists, top session players, and a couple very well-respected members of the Fractal family say things like:
-"These are the best Deluxe IR's I've ever heard."
-"These are MEASURABLY better than the IR's I was using."
-"This is my happy place."
-"The mix IR's sound killer! Having a hard time picking a fav. They have that warm low end I've been missing with my other stuff."
-"This is the closest to the real amp we've heard in the studio. Mind blown!"
I hope these IR's give you a similar satisfaction and experience. And above all, I hope they inspire great music in you.
Feel free to ask any questions.
-Justin
While we're making wishes for the York Audio site, there's also no easy way to see the packs you do or don't own.Hi,I am very pleased with your products..but one thing is confusing me...if I tried to buy for example DXVB Verb Deluxe there is no eay that I can find it...maybe a SEARCH buton will be very useful for neards like me..Thank you!