Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought

711
llllllllllllllllllll wrote: Wed May 15, 2024 2:25 pm kind of halfheartedly tried the KSM137 as well and it sounded totally fine.
I take this back. For the track in question I was literally hitting a tambourine head with a percussion mallet and the KSM137 did it’s job plus some.

Aside from adding a little bit of the signal to the reverb send, I didn’t do anything to process it and the sound really works. I’m sure it’s not shit compared to what a real drummer could do, but it propels the track quite nicely and I’m going to leave it. It just took getting to end of the song and turning it up with all of the other elements in place to notice.

Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought

712
I'm sure some of you have used a T-60 before, but I'd thought I'd compare it to my Gibson Les Paul Studio. The Les Paul is a mahogany body with a rosewood fretboard and standard Gibson humbuckers. I mention all of this, because the sound between the two could not be any more different when it comes to humbuckers. I had the switches on the T-60 in the humbucking position and in-phase. Maybe it's the fact that the T-60 is the later series with the pickup blades, maybe it's the maple fretboard and the bolt on neck, maybe it's the ash or alder body. It sounds more "tight" and in some ways, more "metallic" (with respect to the fact that it has new strings on it). The Gibson is more "fat" and "wide", with the bridge pickup being more nasally. Very different guitars overall. The T-60 has a lot of options, but it cannot do what the Les Paul can do (and visa versa), so it's an addition, rather than replacement.

I almost never use the bridge pickup on the Les Paul, but I would definitely use it on the T-60 with the single coil and phase options. I can see the versatility in it for recording. Not sure if I'd do a lot of that in a live setting. I'm just too clumsy.

Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought

713
I bought a Liven Lofi 6, which is kinda a little groovebox, sampler thing. I bought it hoping it could stand in for a Optigan type of thing, which it kinda can, but using it kinda pushes you into a sort of loop glitching construction which is fun and sometimes frustrating since my brain has no real aptitude for that sort of music. Still figuring out what it is really for, but it sounds kinda cool and is cheep enough that I don't miss the cash. weird thing.

https://sonicware.jp/pages/liven-lofi6
Was Japmn.

New OST project: https://japmn.bandcamp.com/album/flight-ost
https://japmn.bandcamp.com/album/numberwitch
https://boneandbell.com/site/music.html

Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought

714
The DSM Humbolt Simplifier DLX is a dual-channel analog amp pedal, with one channel being hot and the other not. You can choose your preamp style and power amp tube simulation for each channel, as well as cabisms. It comes with a switch pedal that can also turn on reverb. It sounds great going into a DAW directly from the XLR DIs. The headphone jack is a little more complicated and confusing, as I change the mic position, it appears to change the panning, which is not what I would expect. I haven't played it with a cab yet. I got it to have a more streamlined live amp pedal, but after making some concessions, I might just stick with my Opus with one amp setting for live and be more creative with a drive pedal. That being said, I'm not really sure what to do with the DLX, but it's nice to have an extra amp pedal around. It sounds great, but not that different from what I can do with the Opus. The only plus side IMO is that it has 2 channels and comes with a footswitch, if switching between amp channels were a thing one would like to have.

Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought

715
Baroni Labs Bass AMP 200


Image


It's a pedal amp. 200 W @ 4 ohms. However, the brick power supply it comes with is rated for 40 V @ 5 A output, which is 200 W, so unless the class D amplifier in this thing is 100% efficient, you're never going to actually get 200 W out of this thing. Or maybe the power supply is conservatively rated and can actually put out more power. Regardless, it's plenty loud as-is.
The tone stack controls don't have enough range to be super useful, but I was still able to dial in something that sounded good.
It has a built-in optical compressor, which is handy. The footswitch toggles the compressor. There's no main power on/off switch, so it's on as soon as you connect the power jack. Includes an effects loop and a DI output, which is nice to have, but you'd likely need to carry a 1/4" to XLR adapter if you want to use the DI on stage.
The weak part is the internal construction. I bought this one cheap with an intermittent low volume/distortion issue, which I traced down to a bad solder joint at the master volume pot. All of the pots have a small PCB soldered to them, which has a 3-pin connector that runs to the main board. It's a lot of extra solder joints and potential points of failure, but I'm sure it makes assembly much easier at the factory.
Additionally, there are some fairly large components on the board which aren't really secured to protect them from breaking due to vibration, including a large electrolytic cap and the two class-D output filter inductors. I put some silicone adhesive on them to help brace them. The ceramic 1uF input cap that comes right off the input jack was also pretty microphonic when I tapped on it, so I replaced it with a 1.5 uF film cap.
The power supply brick is as big as the pedal itself, so you need to manage that, but it's not a big deal to hide it under your pedalboard or something.
Overall, it's not a bad option to keep in your bag or on your pedalboard as a backup amp on tour or something, but I don't know that I would rely on it as my one and only amp without doing some simple preventative maintenance to counter some of its mechanical shortcomings.

Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought

716
Benchmark Media DAC1. I've never really used a decent DAC before. Picked it up used for cheap on audiogon of all places. It's the model without USB input but the seller included an Anedio USB to SPDIF converter. This isn't the latest and greatest, but jebus it's nice. I'm not even listening to anything lossless yet and it makes a big difference. The internal preamp and headphone amp are no joke. PC usb to Anedio coax to DAC1, XLR to Hypex UcD400's to B&W Matrix HTMs. Sounds effortless, to use dumb audiophile terminology. Lets good recordings sound like they should.

Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought

717
I got a decent deal on a couple of used Golden Age Premier 1073 Neve preamp clones. Good transformers. No surface mount, all through hole. Pretty good feel to the quality. Sound really good, especially for stuff with girth like a Kick or as a Bass DI. Great as a Bass DI actually. I like them.
Was Japmn.

New OST project: https://japmn.bandcamp.com/album/flight-ost
https://japmn.bandcamp.com/album/numberwitch
https://boneandbell.com/site/music.html

Re: Micro-reviews of Gear You Just Bought

718
Guitar strings: I recently got my guitar fixed and setup. I usually use Daddario XLs, but decided to try the XTs. The coating is under the metal and they're supposed to last longer. As someone who never changes strings, this intrigued me. The XTs sound great like a string should, but more importantly they feel comfortable to play. Can't wait for that new string sound to go away, though!

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