Subthumper Posted March 4, 2020 Share Posted March 4, 2020 Hi folks. I have a situation on my pedal board where I split the signal and run through two different chains of fx. This is not a problem as I have two inputs on my amp which mixes the two sounds back together. However it becomes a problem when I have to do a gig using a shared'/house bass amp and the sound guy just wants to use one DI and I have only one input on the amp and only hear half my sound. Ive tried a passive mixer but that just sucked the life out of the signal and sounded crap. So I just bought a mini 4 channel line mixer that is powered but found that it is distorted no matter what settings I use. Does anyone make a dedicated pedal mixer that would do the job? The idea is that I run my two effects chains into it and then into my sansamp so I DI all my sound in one simple go. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jrixn1 Posted March 4, 2020 Share Posted March 4, 2020 Boss LS-2 in "A+B" mode. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Higgie Posted March 5, 2020 Share Posted March 5, 2020 5 hours ago, jrixn1 said: Boss LS-2 in "A+B" mode. Correct answer. Thread closed. We can all go home now folks, nothing to see here! 1 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cuzzie Posted March 5, 2020 Share Posted March 5, 2020 (edited) KMA Audio Machines - The Tyler Edited March 5, 2020 by Cuzzie 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AJ567 Posted March 5, 2020 Share Posted March 5, 2020 If you don't need a device which can adjust the levels of the two signals, then the JHS Summing Amp may also work. Bright Onion could probably make you the same thing for cheaper though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CameronJ Posted March 5, 2020 Share Posted March 5, 2020 11 hours ago, AJ567 said: If you don't need a device which can adjust the levels of the two signals, then the JHS Summing Amp may also work. Bright Onion could probably make you the same thing for cheaper though. I got Bright Onion to make me a custom pedal mixer a few years back. Reasonably priced and a pretty speedy build time, especially as it was one of three custom pedals I ordered together. Would recommend them highly. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dudgeman Posted April 7, 2020 Share Posted April 7, 2020 Any ABY pedal..I use the LS 2 and a lehle Dual (awesome) and I am waiting for a donner pathfinder as this has phase reversal ( i run 2 amps) and also has volume to both outputs...also if it doesnt give ground loops it will be a bargain at £35.00.... thought I would give it a go......Gigrig abybaby also very good but expensive..... there are quite a few on the market just make sure they are ABY and not A/B pedals. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Newfoundfreedom Posted April 7, 2020 Share Posted April 7, 2020 (edited) Any ABY pedal will do the job. I picked a Fender ABY up on eBay for £20 that works a treat. Ignore the link. That's only a AB pedal. But I can't delete the link now I've added it. Edited April 7, 2020 by Newfoundfreedom Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rmorris Posted April 7, 2020 Share Posted April 7, 2020 (edited) On 04/03/2020 at 18:23, Subthumper said: So I just bought a mini 4 channel line mixer that is powered but found that it is distorted no matter what settings I use. What was the 4 channel line mixer ? Seems something wrong if that didn't work properly. Bear in mind that a ABY pedal will simply join the outputs of the two chains together. Whether that works properly depends on the output impedances of your fx chains and the input circuit you're going into. Edited April 7, 2020 by rmorris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BigRedX Posted April 7, 2020 Share Posted April 7, 2020 While splitting a single signal into two works fine passively, I've never had any success with combining 2 signals together without some form of active level matching. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rmorris Posted April 7, 2020 Share Posted April 7, 2020 9 minutes ago, BigRedX said: While splitting a single signal into two works fine passively, I've never had any success with combining 2 signals together without some form of active level matching. yeah - the circuits load each other resulting in loss of level (and a likely change in frequency response).The loss will be equal in each output only if the output impedances are identical. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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