
7704A
Well-known member
I picked up a JamMan Express XT to use for tech stuff, piping guitar into an amp while I'm poking around inside, and ran into what I think is a lack of headroom.
First sign of trouble: playback almost always sounded duller than the original signal.
Further investigation: ran from the looper directly into my audio interface's instrument inputs. Looked at waveforms, and played the original and recorded audio back-to-back.
Observations: the looper playback, as recorded by the DAW, is noticeably duller than the original signal, also recorded in the DAW. Playback waveforms look like they're missing transients, and are flat-topped in the worse cases. Audible distortion in the worst cases when compared to the original signal. Looper is set to unity gain.
Worst-Case Original signal:
Worst-Case Looped signal:
Yowza.
The looper manual says +4dBu (1.228Vrms) max input, and my DMM says my (high-output passive humbucker) guitar's transients peak around 4-5Vrms with hard playing, and around 2Vrms with normal playing, so I guess I can't blame the looper, but it was not obvious at the start that this would even be an issue to worry about. Sold it to MusicGoRound and bought a Boss RC-1. The RC-1 lists a nominal input level, not a max level, and I figured if anyone is going to get it right, it's probably Boss.
So far, that seems to be the case. Playing in the room, recorded loops can still seem duller but that just appears to be the fact that the strings aren't plinking when I'm not playing. In the DAW I can't tell the difference between the two, and the waveforms look near identical:
I had looked at other cheap loopers, in particular the TC Electronic Ditto Looper, but apparently that just has built-in compression to avoid clipping, per user reports. I need a pedal that can drive amps with same signal level as my guitar, so that wouldn't have worked.
Anyone else have this same issue with loopers?
First sign of trouble: playback almost always sounded duller than the original signal.
Further investigation: ran from the looper directly into my audio interface's instrument inputs. Looked at waveforms, and played the original and recorded audio back-to-back.
Observations: the looper playback, as recorded by the DAW, is noticeably duller than the original signal, also recorded in the DAW. Playback waveforms look like they're missing transients, and are flat-topped in the worse cases. Audible distortion in the worst cases when compared to the original signal. Looper is set to unity gain.
Worst-Case Original signal:
Worst-Case Looped signal:
Yowza.
The looper manual says +4dBu (1.228Vrms) max input, and my DMM says my (high-output passive humbucker) guitar's transients peak around 4-5Vrms with hard playing, and around 2Vrms with normal playing, so I guess I can't blame the looper, but it was not obvious at the start that this would even be an issue to worry about. Sold it to MusicGoRound and bought a Boss RC-1. The RC-1 lists a nominal input level, not a max level, and I figured if anyone is going to get it right, it's probably Boss.
So far, that seems to be the case. Playing in the room, recorded loops can still seem duller but that just appears to be the fact that the strings aren't plinking when I'm not playing. In the DAW I can't tell the difference between the two, and the waveforms look near identical:
I had looked at other cheap loopers, in particular the TC Electronic Ditto Looper, but apparently that just has built-in compression to avoid clipping, per user reports. I need a pedal that can drive amps with same signal level as my guitar, so that wouldn't have worked.
Anyone else have this same issue with loopers?