Lets say i m rookie man in this world , and the my questions is , What is the best way to control the difference of volume betweet the a clean rig and a dirty one in the same performance ?
thks
Lets say i m rookie man in this world , and the my questions is , What is the best way to control the difference of volume betweet the a clean rig and a dirty one in the same performance ?
thks
Hi and welcome,
'the best way is' to adjust the volume of the rigs at Your taste and then save the performance.
Here we discussed which Volume to use.. the manual reccomend to use the volume control in the Amp section, somebody use the Rig Volume control.. as You prefer.
Have a look at the Clean Sens & Dirty Sens on the input section as well
If all of your clean rigs tend to be either too loud or too quiet then adjust Clean Sens until they sit better. If it is just one or two rigs here and there then adjust the rig volume or amp volume individually.
Not sure what is implied by your question here. If you want to adjust volume between patches, use the Rig Volume.
If you want to know how to find balance between lower gain rigs and higher gain rigs, try the free rigs of an experienced profiler (for example Michael Britt, Meulendijk, etc) in the Kemper Factory Rigs and examine the volume difference they have between clean and higher gain rigs and then take the clean and dirty profiles you like and match them volume-wise. That will put you in the right ballpark right away as this could be hard to figure out when building rigs in an environment without a full band.
Yes, first make sure your Clean Sens is set correctly (in the input settings). Strum your guitar while turning the Gain knob between fully clean and high overdrive within the same profile, and adjust Clean Sens so that there's no difference in volume.
Clean Sens is a global setting, you should only adjust it when you switch to a different guitar (tip: you can save input setting presets for each guitar you own).
Once Clean Sens is set, use Rig Volume to balance out any remaining volume differences between different rigs. Don't forget to store the performance afterwards.
welcome to the family ?
Trust your ears as you would with separate amps or a channel switching amp. Welcome Sir
I think ears can sometimes be wrong about the volume.
Some rigs sound quieter or louder than they really are.
That's why I measure the volume of each rig with my DAW.
ears are correct, its the DAW meters that are wrong. You ears hear sound as it is perceived whereas meters measure sound in a rigid manner that doesnāt take acount of the way ears work. Always trust your ears over any meter.
When it doesn't sound right I've never had a meter change my mind.