S
slyym
Member
All good stuff to try. I have the Tse808 I'll try later today. I didn't realize BiasFX was so limited. I might just go ahead and buy BiasAmp today as well. Cant really do any fine tuning with what I have now.CaseyCor":2xin4tqk said:Try using a low pass and high pass filter at the end of your signal chain. It can really help filter out the "digitalness".
Running a boost in front (either a real boost or a plugin) can help too. Boosting the input into the amp sim seems to generate a more lifelike tone for me. I use the TSE Audio tubescreamer plugin for high gain sounds, along with my OD pedalboard in front of the interface. Bad Monkey, a homebrew treble booster, and a B.K Butler Tube Driver. You can always use the pedals included with Bias FX, of course. It looks like a lot of fun to play around with. Check out the TSE Audio stuff as well. It's all free and very useable. That's the beauty of VSTs/sims. Rarely are you limited by choice.
Here's a link to the TSE Audio stuff. https://www.tseaudio.com/software/tse808
Mercurial Audio also has a free TS style plugin which sounds really nice in my limited experience. Their amp sims are really good too. There is a free version of their U530 with some limitations. There is a couple of different JCM800 style plugins for free on their site, as well as an emulation of a Cornford amp that sounds really cool. I should use that one a bit more.
Mercurial Audio - https://mercuriall.com/cms/
Does Bias FX have a BOSS OC-2 emu? I've been looking for a VST that can do the filtered low octave thing. Adding a low octave to only the low strings on the guitar. I'd like to use it to fill out the bottom end when I do solo acoustic shows. I'm already using my Macbook with my acoustic rig, so running an emu instead of a pedal would be nice. Right now I use a Waves plugin called LoAir to add some depth to the low end. It helps, but it's not exactly what I'm looking for.
One more thing you can try is adding a channel strip/mic-pre plugin at the top of your signal chain. Waves make a bunch of channel strip emulations based on classic mixing desks. I use the Schelps 73 with acoustic, and the SSL Channel with electric guitars. It's not really their intended use (LoAir isn't for guitars either) but it sounds great to me.