dclaassen Posted April 11 Share Posted April 11 I've not had the chance before to need to DI my Trace GP12SMX before, and have to this weekend. I have left and right post eq and also a pre eq option. I know the difference, but would like a Trace veteran to give me guidance on which to use with a house sound engineer. Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan Dare Posted April 11 Share Posted April 11 I'd ask the engineer which he prefers. He may well want a pre-eq signal, so he can set it up for the PA. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nickthebass Posted April 11 Share Posted April 11 I would send pre-EQ to the FoH if in doubt. Then you can EQ the amp for the onstage sound and fiddle with it during the show without affecting the balance out front. What works on stage and what works out front are not always the same thing. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Supernaut Posted April 11 Share Posted April 11 Always pre EQ if going to the PA for myself. In my experience, a lot of venues prefer that. Reason being, they can get a good sound out front and you can have a different stage sound which allows you to cut through better. Win-win. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dclaassen Posted April 11 Author Share Posted April 11 Thanks to all for the great replies! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nickthebass Posted April 11 Share Posted April 11 3 hours ago, dclaassen said: Thanks to all for the great replies! You’re welcome. Let us know how it goes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BigRedX Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 Pre-EQ, but get the PA engineer up on stage to hear what your bass sounds like to you through your amp and cab(s) so they know what sort of sound to be aiming for FoH. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
warwickhunt Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 4 minutes ago, BigRedX said: Pre-EQ, but get the PA engineer up on stage to hear what your bass sounds like to you through your amp and cab(s) so they know what sort of sound to be aiming for FoH. You'd like to hope they would. I had an experience where the engineer wouldn't take my amp DI (a good DI btw) as he wanted a clean unadulterated signal to work with... I tried pointing out we were a Cheap Trick tribute band and my effects/amp inc valve amp overdrive etc were to recreate a specific bass tone. He wasn't happy but he was being paid by the venue to do the sound for us not him. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Downunderwonder Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 Be sure the desk has phantom power off. Trace never isolated their DI afaik. 18v up it and no more DI. Then they tell you your DI doesn't work! 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Downunderwonder Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 41 minutes ago, BigRedX said: Pre-EQ, but get the PA engineer up on stage to hear what your bass sounds like to you through your amp and cab(s) so they know what sort of sound to be aiming for FoH. Good luck. Having heard so much boom and clank rubbish out front from other bands I just send them my effected signal. At least they are starting from something decent. I still get the odd grumbles it's bloated in the lows. It's the hall and the PA. My cab is full range and the lows are turned down already. Tune your fine PA to the room! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Japhet Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 Engineers generally like as clean a signal as possible which means pre EQ. That's all well and good until you run into a sound engineers who doesn't know what a bass should sound like. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Baloney Balderdash Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 (edited) Buy a good bass mic and insist on using the miced signal, so that it actually sounds like you. If they can do that for guitars, they can do it for bass too. And a lot of professional bass players/soundmen actually does do this. As someone pointed out the sound guy is supposed to work for you, not against you or to his own whims. Yes, it is much easier for him to do the exact same routine on every single bass he encounters, but that isn't actually doing his job properly. Different bass players and bands do tend to have their own sound that defines them, they are not supposed to all sound the same, and a soundman who doesn't recognize this is a lazy hack who shouldn't have been given the responsibility over the PA system and mixer. Edited April 12 by Baloney Balderdash 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lozz196 Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 I always send post rather than pre. The reason for this is that the flat tone of my basses gets in the way of the guitars and doesn’t sound good with them. My tone is adding some highs and dropping some low mids so nothing boomy or distorted that is difficult to deal with, just sculpted a little. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Acebassmusic Posted April 12 Share Posted April 12 2 hours ago, Lozz196 said: I always send post rather than pre. The reason for this is that the flat tone of my basses gets in the way of the guitars and doesn’t sound good with them. My tone is adding some highs and dropping some low mids so nothing boomy or distorted that is difficult to deal with, just sculpted a little. Funny how guitarists always get an "end of signal path" feed to the desk to ensure "their sound" with all EQ and effects are included. When the bass player politely asks for the same option it's often met with a look of confusion as to "why do you want that? I set your tone at the desk" 🤣 Whats often needed is a bit of a balance between on stage sound (tone, definitely, but usually volume level!), PA operation and communication with the engineer as to what the band are looking for. 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dclaassen Posted April 16 Author Share Posted April 16 Thanks for all the wonderful advice above. The sound tech was pretty hands-off, I offered the post feed, which worked great and resulted in a really accurate sound. Another of the advantages of this amp is the choice of pre or post DI outputs. I know it's heavy, and I'm going to get a lighter 4x10 to save my back, but I can't justify getting rid of it! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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