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Anonymous
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Awhile ago people were posting their W/D/W rigs and a discussion came up about mixers. I have been using dry signal in the wet cabs of my setup for awhile, but I always got it from my effects. I thought it sounded really good, but I'm always looking to try new things and psychodave and a few others said adding a mixer can really improve the sound because you aren't going through a bunch of digital conversions on the dry signal in your wet cabs.
I decided to try a mixer, even though I thought my rig sounded really good already. I ended up picking up a MarkL Dual Stereo Line Mixer directly from the company in Poland. Got it quickly and with no issues, which was nice. With this unit, you basically have two stages of effects with the first stage (and dry signal) being fed into the second stage. I put my Eventide PitchFactor and Strymon El Capistan in the first stage, feeding two mono Roland SDE-3000s in the second stage (250ms L/500ms R with a few repeats). Dry signal is present and mixed in both stages. I had to completely re-wire my rack, so I made custom size GeorgeL cables to use throughout, which really cleaned up the rack a lot.
The Mix 1 control sets the level of the summed Mix 1 wet and dry signal. In other words, you set it so that you are getting a proper signal to your Mix 2 effects without overloading them. The Mix 2 control sets the output of the combined signals to your power amp. It's interesting in that the Mix controls do not set the volume of the effects with reference to the dry signal, which is intuitively what I thought they would do. The only way to adjust the amount of wet signal vs. dry is via the effects themselves if they have an output control. The PitchFactor and SDE-3000s do, the El Cap does not. I'd rather have the El Cap in the Mix 2 section, but because it is mono input that wouldn't work - it would only get one side of the pitch shifting effect of the PitchFactor. I would need two El Caps to make it work right in Mix 2 even though it is stereo out.
BOTTOM LINE IF YOU DON"T LIKE READING ALL THIS
- I've been running it with just the El Cap, or just the two SDE3000s w/modulation, or with the PitchFactor (micropitchshift) and the two SDE-3000s w/o modulation and I'm blown away at how much better the rig sounds at ANY volume from bedroom to gig. I really didn't think a mixer would make THAT much of a difference, but it really does. The mix of the effects and the dry signal is much more discernable and the dry signal is much clearer and present in the wet cabinets. The MarkL unit cost me about $350 or so, which IMO isn't much for what it does and the significant improvement in the sound. If you are running W/D/W, I highly recommend a mixer of some kind - it is a noticeable improvement for not that much money.
So the rig is Guitar - pedal board - Henning Bottle Rocket amp --> Center Henning 4 x 12 w/30th Anniversary G12H30s
Henning Bottle Rocket amp --> Suhr Iso Line Out --> MarkL Dual Stereo Line Mixer (effects connected to the MarkL as per above) --> Matrix GT 800FX power amp --> Left and Right Henning 4 x 12 cabs w/30th Anniversary G12H30s
Any questions, fire away and I'll answer them if I can...
Pics:
Steve
I decided to try a mixer, even though I thought my rig sounded really good already. I ended up picking up a MarkL Dual Stereo Line Mixer directly from the company in Poland. Got it quickly and with no issues, which was nice. With this unit, you basically have two stages of effects with the first stage (and dry signal) being fed into the second stage. I put my Eventide PitchFactor and Strymon El Capistan in the first stage, feeding two mono Roland SDE-3000s in the second stage (250ms L/500ms R with a few repeats). Dry signal is present and mixed in both stages. I had to completely re-wire my rack, so I made custom size GeorgeL cables to use throughout, which really cleaned up the rack a lot.
The Mix 1 control sets the level of the summed Mix 1 wet and dry signal. In other words, you set it so that you are getting a proper signal to your Mix 2 effects without overloading them. The Mix 2 control sets the output of the combined signals to your power amp. It's interesting in that the Mix controls do not set the volume of the effects with reference to the dry signal, which is intuitively what I thought they would do. The only way to adjust the amount of wet signal vs. dry is via the effects themselves if they have an output control. The PitchFactor and SDE-3000s do, the El Cap does not. I'd rather have the El Cap in the Mix 2 section, but because it is mono input that wouldn't work - it would only get one side of the pitch shifting effect of the PitchFactor. I would need two El Caps to make it work right in Mix 2 even though it is stereo out.
BOTTOM LINE IF YOU DON"T LIKE READING ALL THIS

So the rig is Guitar - pedal board - Henning Bottle Rocket amp --> Center Henning 4 x 12 w/30th Anniversary G12H30s
Henning Bottle Rocket amp --> Suhr Iso Line Out --> MarkL Dual Stereo Line Mixer (effects connected to the MarkL as per above) --> Matrix GT 800FX power amp --> Left and Right Henning 4 x 12 cabs w/30th Anniversary G12H30s
Any questions, fire away and I'll answer them if I can...
Pics:



Steve