Terry B wrote:Hi Dave, can you explain to me (I must be thick!) but how does any guitar effects pedal help impedance matching - isn't the output from the pedal meant to be fed direct to a guitar amp? Which means you still have the problem of inputting the effects unit output into a mic input on the Zoom RFX2200. Oh, and by the way, has anyone thought about the effect of capacitance of the guitar lead - that can have a dramatic effect on tone in much the same way - too much or too little treble depending on whether the capacitance of the lead is higher or lower than ideal. I used to have the same problem in the old days of turntables and arms matching the impedance of the cartridge to the hi-fi amp!!! You used to be able to buy adaptors the raise or lower it. Is there anything like that for guitars? Surely there must be a simple mod the input socket that would solve this! Any electronics experts please advise!!!
Terry B wrote:Hi Dave, can you explain to me (I must be thick!) but how does any guitar effects pedal help impedance matching
Terry B wrote:has anyone thought about the effect of capacitance of the guitar lead - that can have a dramatic effect on tone in much the same way - too much or too little treble depending on whether the capacitance of the lead is higher or lower than ideal. I used to have the same problem in the old days of turntables and arms matching the impedance of the cartridge to the hi-fi amp!!! You used to be able to buy adaptors the raise or lower it. Is there anything like that for guitars? Surely there must be a simple mod the input socket that would solve this! Any electronics experts please advise!!!
Bojan wrote:Dave, this is a kind of related question. When you play through your eTap2hw and Tonelab into your PC or amp (or Bose system), where do you plug in first, into the etap or into the Tonelab, and what would be the difference?
Bojan
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