Hi Pete. I know this post is a few years old but I wanted to thank you. Nothing sounded good enough for me on my Helix, virtual amps, etc. So I decided to download this Suhr 4x12 Greenback IR. I thought if Pete likes it it must be good , right? I'm so happy I did. I don't have money to buy a lot of IR's, but this one sounds great everywhere, cleans, low and high gain rock, metal, ACDC, Hendrix, Van Halen, Maiden, you name it. You gave new life to my Helix. So THANK YOU very much Pete.
When emulating a larger cabinet like a 4x12, the longer IR helps capture the resonance within the cab, lasting longer than the original transient. To me the IR length under 50 sounds more like a close mic'd 1x12 or 2x12, the most noticeable effect of this of course being the changes in the low end, but without a doubt one of the biggest factors of a half stack's massive sound is that cab resonance.
From an IR producer's perspective I spend a lot of time getting clean captures all the way up to 500ms. I do agree with Pete that most of "the tone" will be the first 20.5ms but a big part of the low end resonance happens after that - this is why Cliff from Fractal Audio introduced the UltraRes format that goes up to 170ms. It's very clear if you use a low end heavy mic like a Royer R-121. With 500ms you're also capturing the room resonances and this will be much more realistic sounding if you capture it in the IR vs use a reverb effect afterwards. We're talking IR reverb vs algo. That being said it's a subtle difference that's inaudible in the mix.
In practice, when mixing- I'm always using a high pass at like 75 or 80 hz, sometimes higher- and a 121 if left un-eq'd is always TOO full/woolly/dark for most things. I simply don't want a bunch of stuff under 70 hz in my guitar tones, it just makes mud! So practically speaking, what I hear in these 20.5 ms IR's is all I really need. If I want 500ms, rooms, etc I can simply to in MIX IR2 in the computer, easy.
The 200ms IR was more reverby, but I wouldn't have noticed in a mix. The difference between 50ms and 18.5ms was almost like the difference between pretty-good fret-hand muting and excellent fret-hand muting, but more as if you were muting reverb as opposed to actual strings, if that makes sense? 12ms was where it went from being acceptable to too short for me, but around 18-25ms seemed to be my favorite length... and over 50ms was almost to echoey. I would not have expected that specific of a preference, and for sure before this video I would have just assumed that the full, non-truncated length would have been my preference. Thanks for the awesome comparison. That PT15 sounds great!
That 18-20ms area is clearly a golden point, as it contains the best qualities of the wave, and not having "messy" reflections, that would be unwanted, especially in a mix.
Thanks Pete for an awesome video explaining the IR length issues. I started using IR's on my Helix very soon after I got it. One of the first things I learnt about them is they need a -18db value to make them sound real. I got that value buy luck zooming in on a value on a video. Never looked back after that and always use IR's. Again thanks for all you do for us guitarist. Cheers Mike
8:10 there is a noticable change in "room" sound, when the IR goes from 26 to 40ms. I think the room info might be an important part of the "realistic" feel of a Mic/room. But ofc it can also be disturbing...if you want a short and dry sound. Nice if you can just dial the length of the IR's. :)
Great video Pete! You have very effectively addressed a debate which has raged through some guitar forums I frequent. However, I would like to add a note just for the sake of clarification. I know you mentioned this in passing at the beginning. But in the case of some IR's, the length is crucial to the overall sound. I am thinking specifically of room and ambient space IR's which are used in some convolution reverb plug-ins. I know that I have a collection of IR's in one of my Waves plug-ins which includes snapshots of some of the most famous studio drum rooms (as well as other acoustic spaces) in the world. And truncating those IR's would definitely have a detrimental effect on the sound, as the overall ambience is actually a very important part of the IR in itself. While 18-20 ms is probably more than enough to do justice to a close mic'ed guitar cab, it simply cannot capture the essence of, say, the Abbey Road main recording room or the Vienna Opera House. And in the case of at least SOME guitar cab IR's on the market these days, a well mic'ed room is actually part of the overall sound. Somewhat obvious, I realize. But an important distinction nonetheless.
Can't tell the difference from 18ms-20.5ms. Could be the TH-cam compression. The new Axe FX III firmware update has added IR length controls so I'm gonna test it myself! Thanks Pete!!!
Thank you so very much Pete. I’m new to the use of IRs and I’ve been seeking out useful, practical information as well as sound theory to guide my understanding and use based on my comprehension. Most of the commercial IR creators seem to offer a mixture of marketing and voodoo. Not you Pete. Your pragmatic instruction and information is just what I seek. Again thank you sir.
Thanks Pete - I was just googling this question when trying to decide between the Mooer RADAR or the Two Notes CAB-M. Incidentally, your old article on Premiere Guitar was an early hit on the Google, and here you are 7 years later with more good info.
Don't want to butt into your decision making process, but think the NUX Solid Studio and Two Notes CAB-M are more on par. 👍 Just my two cents, Good luck deciding!
Awesome! Thanks Pete! I think the loss of bass probably at shorter milliseconds is possibly related to lower frequencies having longer waves (and so it takes a little longer to capture them) but I'm no physicist! I do love my Two Notes Torpedo Cab, bought in no small part thanks to your demo!
Great tone experiment Pete! I noticed a difference at 7:32 on into the video...but yeah...couldn't really hear a differenc earlier on...in a car stereo system. Thanks for all you do!
Killer tone Pete! I too can hear the difference personally like the 200ms it sounds more natural. I’ll have to buy those IRs they sound phenomenal. Thx for the video and BTW love Sunday simulcast. ✌🏻
It’s basically the same as sample rate. Higher sample rates can capture higher frequencies, and beyond a given point those frequencies are inaudible. The length of the IR sets how complex the frequency response can be. This doesn’t mean that a shorter IR can’t reproduce lower frequencies, just that it can’t shape them in a meaningful way. Physical speaker cabs do have fairly complex frequency responses, but just like with sample rate, there’s a point beyond which it doesn’t matter. I mostly agree that 18ish ms should be plenty, but it doesn’t hurt to have more!
To my ears 20 ms lost some top end and airyness compared to 200. Below 20 ms, you can hear the low end bleed off as well. Maybe the top end bleed off is desirable in some circumstances, and the low end roll off as well. After all, we often change mic positions to get similar end results. Anyways, this was very helpful, thanks for posting.
This was so insightful! I know Strymon Iridium goes all the way up to 500ms in stereo. My Ownhammers are at 200ms. I thought that was just them going cheap. Turns out that’s so overkill. I could hear a little more in your midrange at about 50ms at the end, but in all, this was a solid comparison. Thanks Pete!
Excellent demo Pete, very helpful. I can hear a difference, the 20.5 mS seems tighter and more focused. Due to slightly less low frequency response or addition of room reflections, who knows? These will be great for live use, and in a recording situation if a longer IR is needed, easy to use the DAW. Sound logic ; )
Okay after listening about 20 times i think that I hear despite my bad ears (or maybe because of) I could hear a clear difference already in the first example between the PT and your computer (mix ir2 200 ms). It was definitely more dry in my ears. The question is how much it does matter in the mix, probably not at all with reverb and delay on. I can totally agree that 20-25 ms should be enough. As always a great video!
That's a ton of good useful information you've been sharing on TH-cam! This is the last thing I wanted to know but bought some Celestion IR's that come in 200 and 500ms so I had to see if I could find out what the hell the difference is and sure enough you had it. Thanks!
There WAS a volume difference between the two on the amp test but the tone itself was so close as to be negligable. On the shortening test, you got it right, 20ms is about right.
Sounds a bit thinner through the daw on first test. IR's from the amp are a bit fuller, a bit more lows and mids = more aggressive tone :) You rock Pete!
Awesome and interesting as usual, Pete. I had not seen the MixIR before by Redwirez so that was especially intriguing. Although I use Studio One and not Logic, I would be very interested in seeing how you set up your "signal chain" to run guitar straight into, say one of your Apollos, into Logic with whatever amp sim you are using as a plug-in, into MixIR. I don't think you said whether or not you are using the Big Box or only the MixIR. Anyway, just a somewhat quick demo of how you set up to do a pedal or other demo video, or even just to practice, using the MixIR. Kinda sounds like it would be an advert for them, ha ha ha! On another note, I had not heard of Transcribe! until you showed it recently in a video on how to learn songs quickly, and I demo'd that and am using it daily now. Great piece of software and very helpful! I hope they gave you a cut of sales after that video too! :+)
Great video Pete! Very useful, informed comparison. Those super short IRs were reminiscent of the tones in my Digitech RP155 from when I first started playing guitar, lol.
I'm thinking of getting a "st.Rock React:IR" and the specs say Max:190msec. If I load a 200msec or 500msec file into it, will it work, or do I actually have to shrink the file below 190msec ????
Excellent vid. I've been waiting for someone to test this in the real world for a while because, in your head you can't help but think "suhrely longer is better" (you see what I did there :O) but this proves that actually you only need about 20ms to get great results. It also reminded me that when I think of the price of the PT15, I always forget that you have the IRs AND a Reactive Load at that price. Keep up the great work, eh?
I can hear the difference between the 200 and 20 but whether that is a good thing or not whatever haha. The really long irs give a little room flavor which can be cool too.
@@PeteThorn The 20.5ms from the PT15 sounded slightly clearer than the 200ms, which makes sense due to virtually no room reflections. Same thing thing when you swept through mixIR2 as well. It sounded to me that around 100ms was where the room started to creep in. Short, sweet and informative as always!
Excellent video as always. So if low end regularly gets filtered out on guitar recordings a 512 sample points IR (roughly 10 ms) would be sufficient ? Maybe not for bass guitar ? or I am oversimplifying ?
Brian Wampler just made a video on impulse response length, the title is "Impulse Response Cab Sims Explained Better", it looks a bit like an answer to this video. He claims longer IRs sound better.
For me the 20.5ms sounded more in your face and like playing on a real cab. More responsive, but i don't know if i'm hearing it right with my headphones.
this is super interesting stuff for me. I just recently started to use some pretty good free IR's however I made the experience that some of them seemed a little to bass heavy for me. So judging from this video I might try to shorten some of the IR's to maybe get the low ends in check and try if it works for me.
If you were to create an IR for a distance mic how long should it be? I'm interested in using a Beatles style bass cab mic setup live. They would record a bass cab from like 8 feet back for a roomy sound. It can sound amazing, and to have that live would be a dream.
I'd need to run some sort of test tone through the amp to do that- I don't have that kind of thing here, in theory i could figure it out I guess, but I like the approach of just listening to the tone, and letting my ears tell me what is happening! Like I would with any other aspect of audio engineering/mixing
Pete Thorn Just a thought. Only because I thought it would illustrate it visually. I can hear the difference, but I think we can agree musicians sometimes internalize the sound “they’re hearing” I’ve seen enough videos showing guitarists hearing “differences” in guitar tones that are not different at all. Great stuff BTW. Cheers
IMO anything over 150ms or so is just too long and not necessary. The cork sniffers will tell you that ultrares 50 seconds IR's are all they use or whatever, but most of that is silence. Also, I notice delay or some echo or high end shimmer after the main tone of certain brand IR's. Choptones and Arachnid Cabs being two big ones. Pretty cool if ya wanna play slapback without a real delay, but pretty pointless waste of money otherwise.
I seemed to hear a little something happen when you got above 50ms but in what mix would it make any difference. I guess chances are that in the mix you will be doing some level of EQ'ing and effecting thus negating any difference straight away. I could almost see someone going down below 2ms and an effect (of course there's probably a better way to get there). Great video Pete!
Oh yeah, you did say that in the video, and that's probably what I heard then. Hmmm, I think shorter is more versatile then. Early reflections being a normal parameter of reverb I would think two sources of early reflections might often not be good. Unless the PT15 also incorporated a IR length control then definitely 20.5ms is the most versatile thing. You and John are wise indeed.
Great demo Pete! I too use MixIR2 w/Celestion IRs and had no idea that lowering down that far from the 1800 ms max would still give a great sounding result. Any idea if this goes even further in reducing the already low latency? Thanks!
Your friend is right! You don't need longer than 21ms and you can prove that with just simple math... 1024 samples at 48khz mono channel is 21.33ms... which includes bass below 50hz which you will cut out anyway in the mix on the guitars... why would anyone need or want a longer IR... all it does is consume computational resource.
Do you recommend a specific app to reduce the length of an IR? I just got a Sonicake ir loader and the Max length it accepts is 100ms. Just wondering if I buy a pack of IRs that are 200ms will they get auto truncated and will they sound bad. Thanks in advance for any help.
I purchased some celestion IR's recently. I know I'm getting old, but I only expected a few files. Ended up with so many mic variations at so many sample rates and proximities. They all sound great to me. How do I even begin to choose what's best? So complicated.
Start with the high gain 121/57 mix for each speaker/cab, and decide which you like the overall tonality of. Those 121/57 mixes are great, you need not look further than those unless you want something substantially darer or brighter. Use the sampling rate that your DAW is set at if you are running them in a computer. There I just gave you the fast track! :)
Using SCIENCE?? Forming opinions based on one's own ACTUAL experiences?? Are you MAAAAAD??? This is TH-cam!!!! 😂 Great video. That's inCREDIBLY helpful, thank you! (I'm also stunned, almost 2,800 views and no miserable "👎🏻" yet. 😂🙄🤷🏼♂️)
Hi Pete. Hope everything is going great with you. Thanks for doing this video. I just recently started researching IRs. I read that some IR Loaders are somehow better than others. I grabbed the free Loader from Nadir and the free IRs from REDWIREZ. I guess they're not terrible , but definitely don't think they sound as good as what you've just posted. If and when you have time could you share your opinion about this ? Thanks and have a great day. 🎸🎸🎸
Thanks Pete. Going to grab MixIR and some Celestion IRs tonight. (that's what you used , right?). And something else I've been curious about for a few years ; In most of your videos you made before you moved , over your right shoulder I saw some Randall Modular Preamp. My only amp is my Randall MTS RM20. It's become very difficult to track down these modules. Is it possible you might be interested in parting with a couple of those ? If you still have them , of course. And if you might , I have no doubt that you'd be more informed of the prices than I would. Either way , thanks for sharing your knowledge and skills with the rest of us. 🎸🎸🎸
Think of it like a digital picture of what a microphone sounds like on a guitar speaker. It’s high quality highly accurate digital mic/speaker simulation
Hi Pete. I know this post is a few years old but I wanted to thank you. Nothing sounded good enough for me on my Helix, virtual amps, etc.
So I decided to download this Suhr 4x12 Greenback IR. I thought if Pete likes it it must be good , right?
I'm so happy I did. I don't have money to buy a lot of IR's, but this one sounds great everywhere, cleans, low and high gain rock, metal, ACDC, Hendrix, Van Halen, Maiden, you name it.
You gave new life to my Helix. So THANK YOU very much Pete.
you can also play the same signal through both IRs simultaneously with the phase flipped on one. If you hear silence, they are 100% the same
@@mbgmail5911 Agree! I can even hear that with my Iphone earplugs
When emulating a larger cabinet like a 4x12, the longer IR helps capture the resonance within the cab, lasting longer than the original transient. To me the IR length under 50 sounds more like a close mic'd 1x12 or 2x12, the most noticeable effect of this of course being the changes in the low end, but without a doubt one of the biggest factors of a half stack's massive sound is that cab resonance.
From an IR producer's perspective I spend a lot of time getting clean captures all the way up to 500ms. I do agree with Pete that most of "the tone" will be the first 20.5ms but a big part of the low end resonance happens after that - this is why Cliff from Fractal Audio introduced the UltraRes format that goes up to 170ms. It's very clear if you use a low end heavy mic like a Royer R-121. With 500ms you're also capturing the room resonances and this will be much more realistic sounding if you capture it in the IR vs use a reverb effect afterwards. We're talking IR reverb vs algo. That being said it's a subtle difference that's inaudible in the mix.
In practice, when mixing- I'm always using a high pass at like 75 or 80 hz, sometimes higher- and a 121 if left un-eq'd is always TOO full/woolly/dark for most things. I simply don't want a bunch of stuff under 70 hz in my guitar tones, it just makes mud! So practically speaking, what I hear in these 20.5 ms IR's is all I really need. If I want 500ms, rooms, etc I can simply to in MIX IR2 in the computer, easy.
The 200ms IR was more reverby, but I wouldn't have noticed in a mix. The difference between 50ms and 18.5ms was almost like the difference between pretty-good fret-hand muting and excellent fret-hand muting, but more as if you were muting reverb as opposed to actual strings, if that makes sense?
12ms was where it went from being acceptable to too short for me, but around 18-25ms seemed to be my favorite length... and over 50ms was almost to echoey. I would not have expected that specific of a preference, and for sure before this video I would have just assumed that the full, non-truncated length would have been my preference.
Thanks for the awesome comparison. That PT15 sounds great!
That 18-20ms area is clearly a golden point, as it contains the best qualities of the wave, and not having "messy" reflections, that would be unwanted, especially in a mix.
Thanks Pete for an awesome video explaining the IR length issues. I started using IR's on my Helix very soon after I got it. One of the first things I learnt about them is they need a -18db value to make them sound real. I got that value buy luck zooming in on a value on a video. Never looked back after that and always use IR's. Again thanks for all you do for us guitarist. Cheers Mike
8:10 there is a noticable change in "room" sound, when the IR goes from 26 to 40ms.
I think the room info might be an important part of the "realistic" feel of a Mic/room.
But ofc it can also be disturbing...if you want a short and dry sound.
Nice if you can just dial the length of the IR's. :)
Finally a good video about this subject. Like you said we should use our ears... Good job Pete.
I completely agree with Pete- trust your ears and nothing else !
Great video Pete! You have very effectively addressed a debate which has raged through some guitar forums I frequent.
However, I would like to add a note just for the sake of clarification. I know you mentioned this in passing at the beginning. But in the case of some IR's, the length is crucial to the overall sound. I am thinking specifically of room and ambient space IR's which are used in some convolution reverb plug-ins. I know that I have a collection of IR's in one of my Waves plug-ins which includes snapshots of some of the most famous studio drum rooms (as well as other acoustic spaces) in the world. And truncating those IR's would definitely have a detrimental effect on the sound, as the overall ambience is actually a very important part of the IR in itself. While 18-20 ms is probably more than enough to do justice to a close mic'ed guitar cab, it simply cannot capture the essence of, say, the Abbey Road main recording room or the Vienna Opera House. And in the case of at least SOME guitar cab IR's on the market these days, a well mic'ed room is actually part of the overall sound.
Somewhat obvious, I realize. But an important distinction nonetheless.
Can't tell the difference from 18ms-20.5ms. Could be the TH-cam compression. The new Axe FX III firmware update has added IR length controls so I'm gonna test it myself! Thanks Pete!!!
Thank you so much for this video Pete! I'm doing my IRs this week and this video was really useful!
Thank you so very much Pete. I’m new to the use of IRs and I’ve been seeking out useful, practical information as well as sound theory to guide my understanding and use based on my comprehension. Most of the commercial IR creators seem to offer a mixture of marketing and voodoo. Not you Pete. Your pragmatic instruction and information is just what I seek. Again thank you sir.
Thanks Pete - I was just googling this question when trying to decide between the Mooer RADAR or the Two Notes CAB-M.
Incidentally, your old article on Premiere Guitar was an early hit on the Google, and here you are 7 years later with more good info.
Don't want to butt into your decision making process, but think the NUX Solid Studio and Two Notes CAB-M are more on par. 👍 Just my two cents, Good luck deciding!
@@teleteleman1023 - right on
Pete thorn show is like sitting with a next door neighbor in a conversation! cheers Pete thorn.
Awesome! Thanks Pete! I think the loss of bass probably at shorter milliseconds is possibly related to lower frequencies having longer waves (and so it takes a little longer to capture them) but I'm no physicist!
I do love my Two Notes Torpedo Cab, bought in no small part thanks to your demo!
I’m pretty sure you’re right
black shuck is such an epic riff. I love it to. Great vid Pete thanks
Great tone experiment Pete! I noticed a difference at 7:32 on into the video...but yeah...couldn't really hear a differenc earlier on...in a car stereo system. Thanks for all you do!
Maestro PT - You make some of the most useful videos in the history of film. Thanks, big dawg.
Thank you sir!
Killer tone Pete! I too can hear the difference personally like the 200ms it sounds more natural. I’ll have to buy those IRs they sound phenomenal. Thx for the video and BTW love Sunday simulcast. ✌🏻
Is this how I spent my life now? This is so stupid. I love it! Thx Pete
You are prob. just going thru a phase. Don't worry. It will pass.
Great video Sir
A little late on watching this but right around twelve I noticed the bass drop!
I agree with you. That first Darkness album is fantastic. Below 11ms sounded like the point of loss.
It’s basically the same as sample rate. Higher sample rates can capture higher frequencies, and beyond a given point those frequencies are inaudible. The length of the IR sets how complex the frequency response can be. This doesn’t mean that a shorter IR can’t reproduce lower frequencies, just that it can’t shape them in a meaningful way. Physical speaker cabs do have fairly complex frequency responses, but just like with sample rate, there’s a point beyond which it doesn’t matter. I mostly agree that 18ish ms should be plenty, but it doesn’t hurt to have more!
To my ears 20 ms lost some top end and airyness compared to 200. Below 20 ms, you can hear the low end bleed off as well. Maybe the top end bleed off is desirable in some circumstances, and the low end roll off as well. After all, we often change mic positions to get similar end results.
Anyways, this was very helpful, thanks for posting.
This was so insightful! I know Strymon Iridium goes all the way up to 500ms in stereo. My Ownhammers are at 200ms. I thought that was just them going cheap. Turns out that’s so overkill. I could hear a little more in your midrange at about 50ms at the end, but in all, this was a solid comparison. Thanks Pete!
I noticed a noticable difference between the 200ms, vs 20.5. This was listened to with 10 driver in ears.
Excellent demo Pete, very helpful. I can hear a difference, the 20.5 mS seems tighter and more focused. Due to slightly less low frequency response or addition of room reflections, who knows? These will be great for live use, and in a recording situation if a longer IR is needed, easy to use the DAW. Sound logic ; )
Yes in a nutshell this is the exact conclusions I reached.
When will you do the follow up to your studio tour showing us your cabinet room with iso boxes or whatever you do when you mic your cabs!
It’s not done yet! Waiting on a contractor
Thanks Pete, great video. This answers the Helix question that 1024 is ok for IR sample rate.
Thanks so much for this, the times on the Celestron IRs confused the heck out of me!
Okay after listening about 20 times i think that I hear despite my bad ears (or maybe because of) I could hear a clear difference already in the first example between the PT and your computer (mix ir2 200 ms). It was definitely more dry in my ears. The question is how much it does matter in the mix, probably not at all with reverb and delay on. I can totally agree that 20-25 ms should be enough. As always a great video!
Woah, thanks for helping me understand how the IR length affects the overall picture
I see new vid from PT - i hit the thumb. Nothing but evidence in simplicity. Great as always
I doubt it really needs to be longer than 25 or 30ms. Low frequencies on guitar tracks will be cut out in mixing anyway.
Thank you so much for this Video!
That's a ton of good useful information you've been sharing on TH-cam! This is the last thing I wanted to know but bought some Celestion IR's that come in 200 and 500ms so I had to see if I could find out what the hell the difference is and sure enough you had it. Thanks!
There WAS a volume difference between the two on the amp test but the tone itself was so close as to be negligable.
On the shortening test, you got it right, 20ms is about right.
Great demo!
Sounds a bit thinner through the daw on first test. IR's from the amp are a bit fuller, a bit more lows and mids = more aggressive tone :) You rock Pete!
Thank you so much for this demo Pete! I had questions about this, and you've answered them. Much appreciated.
Great video Pete! Really interesting how much the IR can make a difference. Always learning when watching your videos. Thank you.
I found the pt ir in the first example to sound right, where the full length from pc sounded stuffy like an old pod bean
As always Pete, a wealth of knowledge!!
Good morning Pete! You are a great guitar player. Cheers! ☕
Very informative! Thanks Pete!
Awesome and interesting as usual, Pete. I had not seen the MixIR before by Redwirez so that was especially intriguing. Although I use Studio One and not Logic, I would be very interested in seeing how you set up your "signal chain" to run guitar straight into, say one of your Apollos, into Logic with whatever amp sim you are using as a plug-in, into MixIR. I don't think you said whether or not you are using the Big Box or only the MixIR. Anyway, just a somewhat quick demo of how you set up to do a pedal or other demo video, or even just to practice, using the MixIR. Kinda sounds like it would be an advert for them, ha ha ha!
On another note, I had not heard of Transcribe! until you showed it recently in a video on how to learn songs quickly, and I demo'd that and am using it daily now. Great piece of software and very helpful! I hope they gave you a cut of sales after that video too! :+)
Great video Pete! Very useful, informed comparison. Those super short IRs were reminiscent of the tones in my Digitech RP155 from when I first started playing guitar, lol.
Thank you
Thanks! This is really helpful!
I'm assuming the loss of low end comes from the length of the low sine waves being cut off by the IR's decay at lower lengths?
One thing I notice is that the Les Paul Custom always sounds fantastic for the rock riff parts you do lately. Bark and bite.
That guitar just has a great tone, it has a deep sound and a clarity too, it now has Thornbuckers in it...
That was a very cool comparison!! Thanks for another awesome video, kind sir.
Excellent info. Well done.
Phil
NYC Area
Really informative video as per usual thanks Pete. Will you be reviewing the Boss Waza Tube Amp Expander?
Losing some low end might not always be a bad thing...
It all depends on the mix!
Thanks for this Pete, really found it interesting and learnt something useful too!
I'm thinking of getting a "st.Rock React:IR" and the specs say Max:190msec. If I load a 200msec or 500msec file into it, will it work, or do I actually have to shrink the file below 190msec ????
That riff is so badass.
Excellent vid. I've been waiting for someone to test this in the real world for a while because, in your head you can't help but think "suhrely longer is better" (you see what I did there :O) but this proves that actually you only need about 20ms to get great results. It also reminded me that when I think of the price of the PT15, I always forget that you have the IRs AND a Reactive Load at that price. Keep up the great work, eh?
Thanks!
I can hear the difference between the 200 and 20 but whether that is a good thing or not whatever haha. The really long irs give a little room flavor which can be cool too.
Ya I dig the rooms sometimes for some things! But for close mics, the 20ms spec works great and if you wanna do room mics just do em in your DAW.
@@PeteThorn The 20.5ms from the PT15 sounded slightly clearer than the 200ms, which makes sense due to virtually no room reflections. Same thing thing when you swept through mixIR2 as well. It sounded to me that around 100ms was where the room started to creep in. Short, sweet and informative as always!
200 sounded sweeter at the top-end, a bit more record-ready sound in an engineers perspective of listening.
listening on a 5.1 surround and I thought the 20.5 second IR sounded punchier and added clarity...
It's gonna be a bit tighter, with no early reflections
Great vid!!!! This whole time, when I use Helix native I've been using 2048, but really there's no point.. thanks Pete. Great experiment
Big thanks for this video!
Excellent video as always. So if low end regularly gets filtered out on guitar recordings a 512 sample points IR (roughly 10 ms) would be sufficient ? Maybe not for bass guitar ? or I am oversimplifying ?
The IR hosted in the Suhr at 20.5 ms sounded noticeably clearer compared to IR hosted in computer at 200 ms.
Brian Wampler just made a video on impulse response length, the title is "Impulse Response Cab Sims Explained Better", it looks a bit like an answer to this video. He claims longer IRs sound better.
great video, i will test this with some 500ms IRs from OH.
For me the 20.5ms sounded more in your face and like playing on a real cab. More responsive, but i don't know if i'm hearing it right with my headphones.
Pete rocking the scientific method! Great content as always.
that black les paul custom is your most rock guitar!
this is super interesting stuff for me. I just recently started to use some pretty good free IR's however I made the experience that some of them seemed a little to bass heavy for me. So judging from this video I might try to shorten some of the IR's to maybe get the low ends in check and try if it works for me.
Thanks Pete! Damn good info here.
Excellent video. More science, less flaky “it’s the vibe of the thing” opinions. Nice.
If you were to create an IR for a distance mic how long should it be? I'm interested in using a Beatles style bass cab mic setup live. They would record a bass cab from like 8 feet back for a roomy sound. It can sound amazing, and to have that live would be a dream.
Celestion has some bass ir and they usually include room mics- You could give those a try maybe
You would probably want out to 500 ms for room. The celestion ones are either 200 or 500 ms
@@PeteThorn didn't know that! Thanks man!
Hey Pete - question about the PT15; have you & John planned for how owners of the PT15 update the onboard software needed for the IR technology?
It won’t need updating- it’s like a flash drive basically- it just mounts on your desktop to load and manage IR’s
Spot on man.
Couldn’t you show the signal through some type of EQ to show the frequency loss across the spectrum as the IR length shortened
I'd need to run some sort of test tone through the amp to do that- I don't have that kind of thing here, in theory i could figure it out I guess, but I like the approach of just listening to the tone, and letting my ears tell me what is happening! Like I would with any other aspect of audio engineering/mixing
Pete Thorn Just a thought. Only because I thought it would illustrate it visually. I can hear the difference, but I think we can agree musicians sometimes internalize the sound “they’re hearing” I’ve seen enough videos showing guitarists hearing “differences” in guitar tones that are not different at all. Great stuff BTW. Cheers
Please demo a line 6 amplifi TT with an IR
Many of the Own Hammer (and other) IR packs have 200ms and 500ms options. Is there any reason/advantage to having 500ms?
Very helpful video! Definitely clears up the forum BS thats all over the internet.
People will still claim that they heard a difference...
oh man! This is so helpful!
What about room mics? Like a condenser 1-2 meters from the cab? Then it might start to make sense having longer IRs, right?
Yes if you want ambient mics, you’d need longer times- this can be done in the computer easily when recording
Really interesting topic, I'm super fussy about my IR sounds so i found this really helpful.
Thanks as always for your time.
IMO anything over 150ms or so is just too long and not necessary. The cork sniffers will tell you that ultrares 50 seconds IR's are all they use or whatever, but most of that is silence. Also, I notice delay or some echo or high end shimmer after the main tone of certain brand IR's. Choptones and Arachnid Cabs being two big ones. Pretty cool if ya wanna play slapback without a real delay, but pretty pointless waste of money otherwise.
Like! having said that, let's watch the video...
I seemed to hear a little something happen when you got above 50ms but in what mix would it make any difference. I guess chances are that in the mix you will be doing some level of EQ'ing and effecting thus negating any difference straight away. I could almost see someone going down below 2ms and an effect (of course there's probably a better way to get there). Great video Pete!
You'll hear early reflections at that point and if it's a really good IR it might be a cool thing.
Oh yeah, you did say that in the video, and that's probably what I heard then. Hmmm, I think shorter is more versatile then. Early reflections being a normal parameter of reverb I would think two sources of early reflections might often not be good. Unless the PT15 also incorporated a IR length control then definitely 20.5ms is the most versatile thing. You and John are wise indeed.
Great demo Pete! I too use MixIR2 w/Celestion IRs and had no idea that lowering down that far from the 1800 ms max would still give a great sounding result. Any idea if this goes even further in reducing the already low latency? Thanks!
Your friend is right! You don't need longer than 21ms and you can prove that with just simple math... 1024 samples at 48khz mono channel is 21.33ms... which includes bass below 50hz which you will cut out anyway in the mix on the guitars... why would anyone need or want a longer IR... all it does is consume computational resource.
I heard a change @ 12
Do you recommend a specific app to reduce the length of an IR?
I just got a Sonicake ir loader and the Max length it accepts is 100ms. Just wondering if I buy a pack of IRs that are 200ms will they get auto truncated and will they sound bad. Thanks in advance for any help.
I purchased some celestion IR's recently. I know I'm getting old, but I only expected a few files. Ended up with so many mic variations at so many sample rates and proximities. They all sound great to me. How do I even begin to choose what's best? So complicated.
Start with the high gain 121/57 mix for each speaker/cab, and decide which you like the overall tonality of. Those 121/57 mixes are great, you need not look further than those unless you want something substantially darer or brighter. Use the sampling rate that your DAW is set at if you are running them in a computer. There I just gave you the fast track! :)
Pete Thorn Awe that’s so great. Thanks for that.
Hi pete...✌💞
Black Shuck! All i know is your amp sounds awesome!
Thanks man!
Using SCIENCE?? Forming opinions based on one's own ACTUAL experiences?? Are you MAAAAAD??? This is TH-cam!!!! 😂 Great video. That's inCREDIBLY helpful, thank you! (I'm also stunned, almost 2,800 views and no miserable "👎🏻" yet. 😂🙄🤷🏼♂️)
Hi Pete. Hope everything is going great with you. Thanks for doing this video. I just recently started researching IRs. I read that some IR Loaders are somehow better than others. I grabbed the free Loader from Nadir and the free IRs from REDWIREZ. I guess they're not terrible , but definitely don't think they sound as good as what you've just posted. If and when you have time could you share your opinion about this ? Thanks and have a great day. 🎸🎸🎸
The biggest components of the sound- the type of load you are using and the actual IR. Try this exact IR that I'm using if you like the sound!
Thanks Pete. Going to grab MixIR and some Celestion IRs tonight. (that's what you used , right?).
And something else I've been curious about for a few years ; In most of your videos you made before you moved , over your right shoulder I saw some Randall Modular Preamp. My only amp is my Randall MTS RM20. It's become very difficult to track down these modules. Is it possible you might be interested in parting with a couple of those ? If you still have them , of course. And if you might , I have no doubt that you'd be more informed of the prices than I would.
Either way , thanks for sharing your knowledge and skills with the rest of us. 🎸🎸🎸
Would more or less difference with clean sounds ?
Same principles will apply.
@@PeteThorn Thanks
!
What's an impulse response?
Think of it like a digital picture of what a microphone sounds like on a guitar speaker. It’s high quality highly accurate digital mic/speaker simulation
@@PeteThorn thanks!