Thank you for sharing your setup. Every musician has different needs, and the set up of something as flexible as the RC600 is always going to be personal, but we always learn from your videos - and I'm sure we are made aware of options for routing and performace we didn't know where possible.
Thank you for your kind words! The main drive for me to make these videos is to show others what can be done, and if a few people learn something along the way, then that's a real bonus. Cheers, Ross
so being new to the RC6000, I'm curious to these alternative set-ups , also when you try and use the Editor (I haven't bought yet because I can't justify it being worth $50) with SO many ways to set up the pedal its confusing and I wonder how that effects it working with the Editor, from what I've seen with it, it to looks like a HUGE learning curve. I get how you are personalizing it for yourself and give others Ideas, But what would be helpful would be maybe like Dry Erase Templates that fits over each switch, quick newbie Question... can all the Tracks be used for different effects as it seems there is only four channels as it is. seems to be the only limited option in the effect section also they seem to not work as expected when combining some of the effects.
Sort of, yes. The dry signal of the guitar goes into the front of the amp, and the FX loop goes to the in and out of the RC. If the guitar runs into the RC and then out to the front of the amp, then each time you change tone settings/channels on the amp, the playback of tracks will also alter their tones. The FX loop is essential if the user wants to switch channels on the amp and needs to keep the recording of the track in a particular tone. Hope this makes sense? All of the FX within the Katana are set to series, though, and nothing is in parallel within the signal chain itself. Hope this helps. Ross
Thank you for sharing your setup. Every musician has different needs, and the set up of something as flexible as the RC600 is always going to be personal, but we always learn from your videos - and I'm sure we are made aware of options for routing and performace we didn't know where possible.
Thank you for your kind words! The main drive for me to make these videos is to show others what can be done, and if a few people learn something along the way, then that's a real bonus. Cheers, Ross
so being new to the RC6000, I'm curious to these alternative set-ups , also when you try and use the Editor (I haven't bought yet because I can't justify it being worth $50) with SO many ways to set up the pedal its confusing and I wonder how that effects it working with the Editor, from what I've seen with it, it to looks like a HUGE learning curve. I get how you are personalizing it for yourself and give others Ideas, But what would be helpful would be maybe like Dry Erase Templates that fits over each switch, quick newbie Question... can all the Tracks be used for different effects as it seems there is only four channels as it is. seems to be the only limited option in the effect section also they seem to not work as expected when combining some of the effects.
Do you have the key set for each song and use the RC600 harmonies? Thanks for the videos!
I do, yeah. Glad you're finding the videos useful!
So you are sending your guitar signal into the amp and then out to the effects, essentially running in parallel? Sorry if this is obvious....
Sort of, yes. The dry signal of the guitar goes into the front of the amp, and the FX loop goes to the in and out of the RC. If the guitar runs into the RC and then out to the front of the amp, then each time you change tone settings/channels on the amp, the playback of tracks will also alter their tones. The FX loop is essential if the user wants to switch channels on the amp and needs to keep the recording of the track in a particular tone. Hope this makes sense? All of the FX within the Katana are set to series, though, and nothing is in parallel within the signal chain itself. Hope this helps. Ross
😩 Promo`SM
Camera movement is distracting
Appreciate the feedback. I take it all on board, and as the channel grows, so will the quality of videos. Cheers, Ross