I think the tone stack will still work, but won't be accurate to your eyes. I may be wrong, haven't actually tried it.
Posts by audiomitch
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I wasn't that excited when I heard about Liquid Profiling, but now that I've used it I think it brilliant! The Gain Control is awesome and so much like a real amp. No more auditioning multiple profiles for the perfect amount of gain!
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Probably already requested multiple times, but the VST Plugin for the Access Virus is superb. With USB audio it should also be possible with the Kemper. This along with Liquid Profiling would complete the feature set as far as I'm concerned. I'm using IK Multimedia Tonex more than Kemper right now for the sheer convenience of a plugin. I capture my favorite Kemper profiles in Tonex via SPDIF. It's another step, but helps streamline in the heat of a session.
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Thanks! I basically got this room ready to move in, and will do the rest at a more relaxed pace. I'm too old for this - after a few weeks of cleaning, painting, and moving everything hurts!
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Just got done moving in to a new place, and finished setting up my little recording setup. Yay! Anyhow this will be the cleanest it will ever be, it's all downhill from here The monitors look wonky, but it's because of the lens on the camera.
Notice how my Marshall DSL40c makes a great stand for my Kemper?
Now to finish the rest of my new fixer upper house! What have I gotten myself in to??
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I just use an old M-Audio ProFire 2626 in standalone mode. It's a old firewire interface that's no longer made. I see them for like $100 or $150 on the used market. It has great routing features, and I can route the coax S/PDIF to the first 2 ADAT channels. You'll need a computer with Firewire to configure it, though. It's a cheap alternative, the preamps aren't terrible, but the best part is going line level bypasses the preamps completely. That is awesome if you already have great preamps in a lunchbox or something.
But... If I were you, I would probably go analog with the KPA. The Babyface Pro preamps are not bad, and trying to figure out all the digital hoops may not be worth it if you have to take a crash course to get the technology to work. You won't notice much or any difference in sound quality, some people here prefer the analog outs.
My two cents, anyway.
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The resale on these things is great, so you wouldn't be taking too much of a risk if you ended up selling it.
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I successfully used some cheapo coax to optical converters. I think they're the Monoprice ones for like $12 each or so. They worked perfectly, but I ended up using an ADAT expansion box on my Babyface Pro that had coax S/PDIF built in.
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The same thing happened to me. Don't worry, I did the same fix, and all is well several months (and a lot of hours) later. I think it's fairly common.
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I'm not saying that the Kemper clock worries me quality wise, but for the paranoid users out there it might be worth mentioning that e.g. RME interfaces interpolate external/received clocks up to their standards. The feature is called Steady Clock IIRC.
I'm not sure about other manufacturers, but I guess RME aren't the only folks that incorporate ideas like that into their devices.Exactly. Digital clocks sync with each other, they don't replace. If you only have the choice of syncing a poor clock and a quality clock, choose the poor one as the master. The better clock will stay in sync much better than the poor one.
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There are other arguments for using S/PDIF than just fidelity. I use digital on my Kemper, yet I use analog on my Virus.
Is there a huge sound difference between S/PDIF and analog? Not really. But there are a LOT of things along the way that can change that. Bad cables, RF interference, dirty contacts, accidental phase issues, etc.
Introducing some unnoticed hum or analog induced distortion in to the signal will add up after stacking the tracks.
On the other hand, S/PDIF tends to either work or not work. And when it's not working it's REALLY obvious.
Then there's the personal OCD factor for us anal types. I just don't like the idea of added conversions. So sue me.
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pretty sure it's a joke... or is this thread the punchline? Trust no one!
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Agree, one of the best pieces of gear I've ever bought. It has everything - it's fun to geek around on but incredibly useful at the same time.
The more you learn it, the more impressed you will be!
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Really high quality stuff! Nice writing and execution
BTW, your Lead profile is my go to for solos now. Best profile I've found so far! Thanks for sharing your stuff.
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Wow! Guitars sound great!
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For me personally, I find it's a lot like other gear like with tube amps or pedals.
You'll find profiles you like and use them for awhile until the 'new car smell' has gone and then you seek something else that is better or different sounding. It's a vicious cycle!!
That next pedal/guitar/bass/profile/plugin/computer/synth will be the ultimate answer that unleashes everything!!
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Thanks for the replies. Will this actually sound good or is this a cheesy solution?
It's going straight to the power section this way. You definitely want to avoid going through the DSL40c preamp, I can't think of any other way of doing it.
But like I said, be careful, you won't have any kind of volume control on the Marshall, just the KPA (and turn off the KPA cab!)
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You could always plug the KPA in the DSL40c FX Return. Just make sure the KPA is turned WAY down or you will get quite an earful.
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The Virus? Yeah, I'd assume so, as long as the KPA can send a MIDI clock stream, which I expect it can.
Yes, the Virus syncs quite nicely to MIDI "Beat Clock", at least coming out of my DAW.