Recently I did a couple of gigs in which they provided a "decent" backline, so I decided to invest a little $ and put a delay on my pedalboard so that I wouldn't have too dry a sound when using a backline. My board had In/Out buffers (homebrew), a compressor, a Zendrive, a Crybaby, a "Blue Magic" (homebrew), an EB volume pedal and a Boss tuner. I've added a TC Flashback which, with the possibility of editing your own custom patch via Tone Print, has proven to be a very valuable addition. This little set up works really well and putting it in from on my own amps highlights the "limitations" of using a Dumbleator in terms of loss of dynamics. Running overdrive and delay via the pedalboard sounds good and is pretty "bouncy." Also, putting the volume pedal right before the amp's input acts as an overall master volume, and not a gain control, and that comes in really handy. I really like these results and can see why maybe guys like RF and LC have moved in this direction.
On the flip side of the coin, the overdrive sound of the amp itself is what got me on this Dumble quest path 15 years ago, and I think that is the "ultimate" lead sound when things are dialed in just right. Of course, being able to achieve that depends on a number of factors and sometimes the planets just don't line up at a gig and we struggle with the amp a bit. Nevertheless, I would like to see if there is a way to have, when using the Dumbleator, some of those dynamics we hear when not using the loop. I'll state that, to me, using the delay from the pedalboard and the overdrive from the amp is simply not an option... I don't care for that sound.
I'd like to see if you guys have any ideas in this area. I'll list the things that I don't think have worked out so well for me:
1. Having a bright cap on the amp's master volume control (for non HRM amps where there is a single overall master) is a pain. If I dial it where it adds chime to the clean, the overdrive will be harsh; if I dial it where the overdrive is smooth the clean will be too boring. I have tried 20, 30, 47 and 68pF and nothing sounds good to me. Has anyone tried something more radical, like some Marshall's have? One big con to having a brightness cap around the master is that if one decides to not use the loop, the amp will be way too bright as the master settings will be lower in that case.
2. Bright switch on the Dumbleator's send. This is a huge cap, 1,000pF over a 250K pot, and while it sounds good at low (i.e., not gig) volumes (I turn up the Send control to get the brightness I want and then turn down my FX input level to prevent overdriving the FX unit), it seems to never sound good at gigging volumes. Has anyone tried different brightness caps here?
3. Bright switch on the Dumbleator's return level. This is a smaller cap (270 pF) and while it can work OK sometimes, by the time I get the rig up to gigging volume, the effect of this cap is negligible.
Somehow I think items 1., 2. and 3. above are not a solution that would work for me. I wonder if rather than trying to make up for loss dynamics in one spot, one could implement a more "distributed" solution. Has anyone tried using small caps in various places, for example a 30pF cap on the amp's preamp volume control, permanently wired there and maybe a 15pF on the master? And some smaller permanent caps on the Dumbleator send and return pots? Lastly, perhaps trying to fine tune the loop brightness network in 124 (220K resistor // 250 pF cap) and maybe using 470K // 500pF, etc.? I have never toyed with that myself and what I like about this is that the "fix" is only implemented when needed, since the network is out of the picture when there is nothing plugged into the loop.
I realize a solution to this problem may be adding the "bright cap on clean only" capability via relay, but I am curious about finding a more "organic" approach...which may or may not exist. Also, while some people have success using parallel loops, I think they are hard to dial in and limit the type of FX that can go in a loop since they get along with time-based FX but not compressors, EQs, etc.
I hope you can share some of your experiences in this area.
Thanks,
Gil