jrixn1 Posted May 30 Share Posted May 30 9 hours ago, JPJ said: I struggle with the peak signal flashing constantly with the gain set at about 11 o’clock with a passive P bass, whether there are effects engaged or not. I’d have expected the loop to only show on the post peak? You originally wrote that the gain was "hardly on" but subsequently said that it's at 11 o'clock - which is it? 11 o'clock is about 40% way round on that pot, so it's not unreasonable. My P bass peaks at 2 o'clock with the eq flat - but I do often slightly boost some low mids, so my gain is usually at 1 o'clock. You also said "the gain is so low that I’m actually missing something from my tone". The 'peak' light is pretty objective though for setting the correct level. How is the tone of your basses through the EBS if you remove all other pedals from the chain (before, after, and in the effects loop)? I agree that the peak light is independent of anything that comes after it, including the effects loop. One thing to say though is that the effects loop has the option of series or parallel. I think parallel mode will affect the gain structure (even if the pedals in the loop are bypassed), since it's summing two signals. So in that case, the EBS input gain would need reducing. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JPJ Posted May 30 Share Posted May 30 19 minutes ago, jrixn1 said: I agree that the peak light is independent of anything that comes after it, including the effects loop. One thing to say though is that the effects loop has the option of series or parallel. I think parallel mode will affect the gain structure (even if the pedals in the loop are bypassed), since it's summing two signals. So in that case, the EBS input gain would need reducing. Boom! By Jove I think you’ve cracked it! I was indeed running the effects loop in parallel. Just tried it now with my Lindy Fralin equipped Lakland P (a reasonably high output passive bass). In parallel mode, input gain was around 8 o’clock and still an occasional flash of the input peak light. In serial mode, I could crank the input gain to almost 12 o’clock before the input peak light flashed. The loop has the TC Plethora X3 and a Sansamp v2 (so EBS > TC Plethora > Sansamp > EBS) and all effects were off. I’ve a new toy arriving (hopefully) very soon that will require a rewire of my board, so I will do more extensive testing to work out the best signal path. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ramirez Posted May 30 Share Posted May 30 On 28/05/2024 at 10:01, JPJ said: I feel that the gain is so low that I’m actually missing something from my tone. . The entire gain range is there to be used, so that’s no problem. In a well designed circuit the gain does not change your tone (obviously, circuits designed to deliberately overdrive/distort behave differently) It is simply clean gain, designed to optimise your signal level for the next stage. Your gain has a wide range in order to cater for difference in output between different basses, as you’ve found. Just set it accordingly. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JPJ Posted May 30 Share Posted May 30 (edited) 1 hour ago, Ramirez said: The entire gain range is there to be used, so that’s no problem. In a well designed circuit the gain does not change your tone (obviously, circuits designed to deliberately overdrive/distort behave differently) It is simply clean gain, designed to optimise your signal level for the next stage. Your gain has a wide range in order to cater for difference in output between different basses, as you’ve found. Just set it accordingly. I don’t disagree, but if you don’t gain stage correctly at each point in your signal chain you will eventually run into trouble (something I learned early on running PA for various bands). With the EBS, I feel/felt like I had too little gain at the start of my chain and that the peak light was almost permanently on even at moderate settings despite the output sounding ‘weak’. I also learned that, despite what EBS support told me, if you drive the preamp to the point where both the pre and post peak LED’s are flashing away, you suffer a signal drop similar to a hard compression (I could see this on the input VU of my Ashdown amp). I suppose this is better than a really awful square wave distortion but it’s still not very nice when you experience it for the first time. As I said above, I will be re-wiring my pedal board soon so I will play around with the order of my pedals to see which gives the best results. Edited May 30 by JPJ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ramirez Posted May 30 Share Posted May 30 14 minutes ago, JPJ said: I don’t disagree, but if you don’t gain stage correctly at each point in your signal chain you will eventually run into trouble (something I learned early on running PA for various bands). With the EBS, I feel/felt like I had too little gain at the start of my chain and that the peak light was almost permanently on even at moderate settings despite the output sounding ‘weak’. . Well yes, that’s exactly the point I’m making. Gain staging is crucial in order to get the best from each stage in the chain. If your peak light is permanently on, then you have too much gain - the light responds to the level going through, not to the actual physical position of the control. You need to set your gain so that the peak light does not come on. If the output is sounding ‘weak’ (can you elaborate on this?) then turn up your monitor volume (or amp, however you use it), or you might need a little gain at the mixing desk to bring it up to operating level there. The gain level will not make your bass sound weak by itself- it’s just to set a healthy working level for your signal, loud enough to be noise-free, and quiet enough to avoid clipping/distortion. It’s not an ‘effect’. If the lights are on, you simply have too much gain. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JPJ Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 (edited) And the calm is restored, along with my faith in the EBS Stanley Clarke. After watching a couple of videos on YouTube by recognised pro recording engineers, and conversing with you lovely people on here, I came to the conclusion that, alongside the aforementioned series/parallel loop issue, I was really running to much additive tone on both the SC and the Ashdown. So I went back to first principles, turned all the tone controls to their zero position, and started from scratch using subtractive rather than additive tone changes, just as I would when mixing FOH. The result, the best tone I’ve had across fretless P and EUB both ‘on stage’ and FOH in a long long time. Still got a rare flash of the post peak LED on the SC, but it was literally that, a rare flash. I’m sitting here typing this feeling slightly stupid. When running FOH sound this is my go to technique, and I seldom need more than a 3db cut to tame any wild frequency. But playing bass, It’s so easy to keep adding and adding more and more tone boosts across the frequency spectrum until all you’ve actually achieved is a very loud obnoxious mush. Going back to first principles has opened up my sound and by subtraction, rather than addition, I’ve retained all of the positives with none of the negatives. Edited June 2 by JPJ 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paddy Morris Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 Thanks for sharing that. It's good to know what the issue was. Glad it's sorted. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ramirez Posted June 1 Share Posted June 1 Good to hear! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
knicknack Posted Tuesday at 12:57 Share Posted Tuesday at 12:57 I don't suppose anybody here has one of these currently? Trying to troubleshoot for a friend but don't have one in my possession! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JPJ Posted Tuesday at 13:03 Share Posted Tuesday at 13:03 5 minutes ago, knicknack said: I don't suppose anybody here has one of these currently? Trying to troubleshoot for a friend but don't have one in my possession! Got one sitting next to me here in the office - what do you need? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
knicknack Posted Tuesday at 13:11 Share Posted Tuesday at 13:11 @JPJ amazing! I am looking to send a separate line to a 2nd amp (powering a bass board). I am wondering whether the FX loop can just send signal when in parallel mode, without cutting the rest of the chain? Or whether there is a mode that allows the tuner out to be always active. Plan C would be to put some kind of splitter in the FX loop, but i'm dealing with an artist who doesn't want things to be any more complicated! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SimBass Posted Tuesday at 13:31 Share Posted Tuesday at 13:31 I could test this evening when I'm home but my guess is that it would work (FX loop on parallel mode) although it's worth considering I'm pretty sure the Mute button would only mute the main out, not the FX out? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
knicknack Posted Tuesday at 13:52 Share Posted Tuesday at 13:52 @SimBass Extra output always being active wouldn't be a problem 👍 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JPJ Posted Tuesday at 17:55 Share Posted Tuesday at 17:55 There is a small switch inside the casing that switches the tuner out to be either permanently on or switchable with the mute switch. Sounds like this could be your answer? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
knicknack Posted Tuesday at 21:28 Share Posted Tuesday at 21:28 @JPJ That is perfect... thankyou! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MoJoKe Posted Wednesday at 11:01 Share Posted Wednesday at 11:01 17 hours ago, JPJ said: There is a small switch inside the casing that switches the tuner out to be either permanently on or switchable with the mute switch. Sounds like this could be your answer? Have you a pic of its location please? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SimBass Posted Wednesday at 11:39 Share Posted Wednesday at 11:39 Testing results for using the FX in parallel as a second output: It does technically work BUT only if you have a Y-Type insert cable to seperate the send from the return. If you plug a normal unbalanced jack cable into the FX socket, the entire pedal has no outputs whether in Paralell or Serial. I don't have a balanced jack to jack to hand to check but I assuming using a balanced Jack-to-Jack would have the same result if plugged into an unbalanced socket (amp input) since the Ring and Tip would be connected at the amp and and again disable all pedal outputs By plugging my insert cable in and then only plugging the "ring" side into another source, I successfully got 2 outputs simultaneasly. As expected the FX send was uneffected by the mute or master volume, you get what ever volume the gain sets. I had to have my second source very close due to the length of cable but this sort of cable would work better to plug a standard unbalanced Jack-to-Jack into if you need more length: 6.35mm Stereo Jack to 2x 6.35 Mono Jack Sockets Hope that helps, it sounds like if this is a permanent set up then the tuner 'switch' is a better solution Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JPJ Posted Wednesday at 12:36 Share Posted Wednesday at 12:36 1 hour ago, MoJoKe said: Have you a pic of its location please? Found this on the internet - its on the bottom of PCB, easily accessible once you open the pedal up. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MoJoKe Posted Wednesday at 13:43 Share Posted Wednesday at 13:43 (edited) 1 hour ago, JPJ said: Found this on the internet - its on the bottom of PCB, easily accessible once you open the pedal up. Brilliant thanks, I just found that article too! Can I ask, what then happens when you hit the mute pedal once you have flipped the dip switch? Edited Wednesday at 13:43 by MoJoKe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JPJ Posted Wednesday at 15:58 Share Posted Wednesday at 15:58 2 hours ago, MoJoKe said: Brilliant thanks, I just found that article too! Can I ask, what then happens when you hit the mute pedal once you have flipped the dip switch? The main out and DI outs are muted but the tuner output stays on. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MoJoKe Posted 16 hours ago Share Posted 16 hours ago cool thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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