stratotone
Active member
Take it from someone who had a pedaltrain pro FILLED with pedals running through the loop and front...
1) depending on your amp's loop, consider either making sure *all* of your fx loop pedals are line level or get a Eb tech line level shifter. one instrument level in there with the line levels is a bad idea.
2) Get some velcro cable ties and use those to tie together your audio cables going in/out from the board.
3) Don't skimp on a good power supply for your board. The voodoo labs pedal power 2 is pretty nifty.
4) strongly consider a pedaltrain board if you don't have a board already - the design is great, and it's easy to reconfigure later when you decide that you want to switch out something or move it around.
5) Get some Gepco XB/20 cable and some G&H ends. Solder up your cables you'll need to size. Don't do the George L stuff, sure you can fix them on the fly but when they go out it's still a pain in the ass. Plus I got nailed once when I trimmed it to size - it didn't reach after I trimmed off the end. DOH! While you're at it, get enough length of cable and make some good cables for the rest of your chain too. Make a few extras that are the maximum length of any on the board so in an emergency you can just swap a cord out, continue with the gig/jam/whatever and then fix it later.
I'm getting ready to put together a couple of different boards - I have the M13 Line 6 setup that works great, a Fractal with a Ground Control Pro that is sweet, but I want a couple of small pedal based boards so I can use some of my pedals - Bad Horsie Wah, Boss DD20, CE20, Fulldrive 2, assorted fuzzes and overdrives, MXR vintage flanger, not so vintage Phase 90, etc. I'd rather have the stuff on a board ready to roll than loose in a bad, which is how all my home-painted pedals I built got chipped to hell.
Pete
1) depending on your amp's loop, consider either making sure *all* of your fx loop pedals are line level or get a Eb tech line level shifter. one instrument level in there with the line levels is a bad idea.
2) Get some velcro cable ties and use those to tie together your audio cables going in/out from the board.
3) Don't skimp on a good power supply for your board. The voodoo labs pedal power 2 is pretty nifty.
4) strongly consider a pedaltrain board if you don't have a board already - the design is great, and it's easy to reconfigure later when you decide that you want to switch out something or move it around.
5) Get some Gepco XB/20 cable and some G&H ends. Solder up your cables you'll need to size. Don't do the George L stuff, sure you can fix them on the fly but when they go out it's still a pain in the ass. Plus I got nailed once when I trimmed it to size - it didn't reach after I trimmed off the end. DOH! While you're at it, get enough length of cable and make some good cables for the rest of your chain too. Make a few extras that are the maximum length of any on the board so in an emergency you can just swap a cord out, continue with the gig/jam/whatever and then fix it later.
I'm getting ready to put together a couple of different boards - I have the M13 Line 6 setup that works great, a Fractal with a Ground Control Pro that is sweet, but I want a couple of small pedal based boards so I can use some of my pedals - Bad Horsie Wah, Boss DD20, CE20, Fulldrive 2, assorted fuzzes and overdrives, MXR vintage flanger, not so vintage Phase 90, etc. I'd rather have the stuff on a board ready to roll than loose in a bad, which is how all my home-painted pedals I built got chipped to hell.
Pete