Posts by wpotere

    Totally agree on this! If this was out when I got my Kemper a few years back it would have been all I needed!

    I see what he is getting at. Phaser Vibe is the correct effect, but there is no smooth tempo change and there is no way to actually disable tap tempo. So the short answer is yes, you can change the tempo with a pedal, but it is not a smooth change like my DejaVibe, it does it by beat count (rate). The Deja and Uni Vibe have a speed control that is literally just that.

    I meant what Kemper effect are you using and trying to morph? I have a Deja Vibe and can control the speed but the Kemper is a little different and there really isn't a "Uni Vibe" effect. You can use the Phase Vibe or Chorus Vibrato that will get you close.

    Just followed your process on my toaster and it kept the settings. I copied one slot to another and it automatically saved (line stayed green) and synced with my Kemper. When I switched to a different performance and back the settings were kept.

    You have something weird going happening. You might try right clicking on the slot and selecting "Store in profiler" to see if that saves it.

    Okay, so I am in the process of moving over to a Mac. Everything is updated to the latest public release including Rig Manager (version 3.4.45) and I am running it on Sonoma. Here is what I am seeing.


    I can actually import a rig into Rig Manager, but only to the profiler. If I try to create a folder and import a rig there, the cursor never gives me the green symbol. I have also tried to use the import and when I have a folder that I created selected, all the files are greyed out. That said, if I go directly to the profiler, that isn't a problem. Do any of you Mac folks know what I could be missing. I'm an IT guy, but Mac isn't my forte... (yet). Any help is appreciated, and before it is asked, yes I re-installed the software.

    If I want to go from gain 10 to 0 on a Liquid profile the generic gain does not cover that much real-estate on the LP gain. On one example, I can only go down from 10 to 1.4. Really, the generic gain should not even be an option for liquid profiles. This is weird. Also, what if I want to match morph to specific values of the amp gain? You would have to do trial-and-error on the generic since the values don't match. I am confused.

    Again, you have it backwards. Generic Gain is the full range the Kemper can do and Gain on an LP is what the amp model can do. So, when you setting the morph on an LP, you need to watch the Gain knob as you roll up the Generic Gain and stop once it hits 10 or the level below that you like. Going past it will push the gain level beyond the actual model (think Fender Princeton with Soldano Gain) and may sound bad. Kemper is allowing us to have the ability to experiment, but you certainly don't have to do that.

    I dropped a lot of cash on compressors to do an in depth test. Something very interesting happened. I had just put a Keeley Compressor Plus on my board and thought it was the best compressor I had ever played. In the end after doing an in depth dig into 5 compressor pedals, the Keeley Compressor Plus is my least liked one of the 5. It took hundreds of dollars to figure that out.

    Yeah, I have one and and never could bond with it. Luckily I got it on sale.