If you have active( EMG) pickups would you even need a buffer in the case of 2x10foot cables and 8-10 pedals with patchcables?its low z from the get go right?
One of the best explanations comes from Mike Fuller: " Although my ears always told me that it sounded “tinny” and that there was signal loss, with the help of a my favorite Electronic Engineer (using some very expensive test equipment) we recently documented that each unity-gain FET buffer actually cuts the gain somewhere between 0.3 to 0.6 dB. This loss of gain is in the low-Mids and Bass frequencies, resulting in that “tinny” sound now that the highs remained and some of the bass and mids are gone. Now factor in that there are two FETs per pedal required to couple the IN & OUT path, that’s an obvious loss of between 1dB-2dB per pedal. What’s an even bigger issue with this old style unity-gain FET bypass? It kills dynamic pick response, i.e. it kills the difference between picking soft and picking hard…Yes, when the pedal is in bypass! This to me is a deal-breaker, and while I’ve always felt this to be the case, it’s great to be able to actually see it on the scope."
It would be interesting to have the sound reference through the 10 foot cable added to the 40 foot cable as well. This way we could hear the signal losses before activating the buffer.
I took your advice and put a TC tuner buffer after the old school whah (first pedal) and a TC buffer at the pre amp input - after all the pedals and cables. It was like lifting a carpet off the speakers! Always GREAT vids!
Here is a question: on a ampless pedal board that has an amp going into a wet section like an H90 or Big sky. The wet section being the last in the chain. How would you suggest handling the end of the chain? (Examples: Kemper player>wet section >Buffer>DI>FOH or Kemper player>Wet section>Active DI>FOH)
How curious, huh? ... The Klon sounded the best to me. But the best to me is not necessarily equal to the most natural to you. All in all, I guess it's up to taste after all.
@@VertexEffectsInc My reference point is: JMP 4-input, top of channel I, Volume on 10, Volume II up 3/4 because it adds some weird interaction. No pedals. 4x12 G-12M/25. That might be a mid-rangey setup to most, but it cuts through nicely. Every other amp/pedal combo I do (30+ amps, 75+ pedals) is me just trying to emulate that sound. What I mean when I say "natural".
I have always been wary of pedals that have a random buffer in there. I want the effects pedals to determine tone and not some random buffer. Thx for the video
Hi Mason. I just wanted to mention that my new Ultraphonix is a game changer. I left the pesky tube amps at home and ran it into a JC40. AMAZING TONE!! Thanks brother!
Great video. I listened with headphones and just wanted to say I like the sound of the room you’re in. It’s pretty live for a TH-cam video and sounds great with Masons voice.
The funny thing to me is that the worst sounding buffer in this comparison (in my opinion) was the Klon Centaur, the most expensive pedal here by far. The BOSS and Ibanez buffers definitely weren't perfect, but the Klon really did a number on the tone.
Great video, I recently purchased a Lehle Sunday Driver, although it is no longer in production (there is a SD2), it has excellent characteristics,1M/150ohm,and what is more important in the buffer, there is no loss of high frequencies when reducing the volume of the guitar!
So, I was hoping I wouldn’t have to get a buffer. Haha. I was going to buy a volume pedal this weekend but I should probably get a buffer. I play post rock, post metal, and ambient so no pedals isn’t an option for me. But, I plugged straight into my amp the other day and everything about the signal was better. Louder, fuller, stronger, ha.
90% of players will never her any difference in any buffer over a different. BOSS pedals are buffered and all work exactly as designed. Zero loss, zero added, not to a human ear.
I could be wrong but I think this TH-camr is trying to clickbait for clicks and views. Many guitar TH-camrs are getting aggressive with hot takes clickbait
I heard the analogy that buffers are like taking a wide hose with a mild flow, and shrinking the size of the hose until the same flow becomes higher pressure. Is that right? To my ears it sounds like they’re eliminating a lot of headroom that harmonics exist in which would fit with this model. I find that something very pleasing is eliminated, not in the actual note itself but in the space around it, the atmospherics and so on, and it becomes too focussed. I also don’t understand the need for them now, the best guitar music is in the past and most of it was made without buffers… and it sounds amazing.
Great video I enjoyed the information. I play Fender bass guitars a Percission and Jazz bass. I recently bought a Gater Case Pedal Board to use for my pedals. I need help with the order. First I have a TC Electronic Tuner, Second a Storm King pedal , 3rd Aguilar Envelope Filter, 4th Aguilar Grape Phaser, 5th Aguilar Chorusaurus, last a MXR Envelope Filter all pedal are in a ISOPT Power Supply. Im planning on purchaseing. Aguilar Octamizer and a Fuzz Pedal but Im not sure if I have them in the right order because sometimes my MXR will not engage properly. Do I need a buffer for these? Im using 10ft gold tip cables Please Help Me Rig Doctor Im a female and dont know if I have it right. I play through a Fender 500W Bass Amp. Please Help. Thank You In Advance.
I have the MI Audio Boost n Buff V1 rising sun pedal at the start of my chain and a Mosky Pure buffer at the exit on my board. I think this is adequate but certainly no expert. How does that rate as far as you're concerned?
Mason, I'm about to buy the Vertex Tour Elite and build it for my home hobby W/D/W setup. I'm basically just doing the guitar with the dry effects into amp cab, pulling a line out from my power station to my micropitch pedal and from there through my time based effects in stereo to my stereo power amp. I want to add the Vertex buffer to the board but how do you wire up the W/D/W through the buffer when you basically have a dry effect chain to the dry amp but then have a stereo chain to the stereo power amp? I see a couple of diagrams on Sweetwater but they basically don't seem to show this basic W/D/W setup on there. It shows a mono, stereo and a 5 cable method. Any insight?
Mason, nevermind, I figured out how to do it using that stereo diagram. You just take the line out from the power station straight into your first pedal then it splits to stereo and on through the stereo portion of the buffer. Your mono just continues on to the amp head from your dry effects. Duh!.
Silly question… Does the DIY mono buffer with tuner out or the buffer you sell direct also work for bass? I ask because the JHS buffer states it’s not meant for bass on their product page.
None of the buffers matched the reference’s “bounce” and treble in the bass strings. However the Klon’s was noticeably the worst. I could live with the Boss or Vertex ones.
He explained why he didn’t do that based on a looper pedal. A recording would be the same thing. It would be a source with a different impedance than a guitar.
Does anyone know how good the quality of the buffered bypass of NUX pedals is ? Using the NUX_Sculpture Compressor as the first pedal on the board and was wondering if getting a Boss one would be a step forward.
Uncle Mason, I always use a Shure GLXD pedalboard wireless. I've heard this provides the "input" buffer. Would you still recommend an "output" buffer at the end of the chain? Thanks!
Question, please inform. If I have a quality buffer at each end of my board but a mix of good, bad and no buffer on the board, are the good ones negated?
I have a question in regards to an acoustic board. I’m planning on building a small acoustic board with a reverb pedal and a LR Baggs Voiceprint DI. I was planning on putting the reverb pedal before the DI and having the DI go straight into FOH. Would you still recommend a buffer and if so how many and where would I place it/them in the chain? Thank you! I’ll be plugging in a J-45 using a LR Baggs Element VTC pickup into the small board
In the past, Mason has mentioned TC Electronics as pedals that have acceptable impedance numbers. Is that still the case? I have a TC tuner and reverb at both ends of my signal chain and it seems to work well.
I started wondering about this and do you need a second buffer if you are using the 4 cable method and have pedals in the effect loop? Or does your buffer pedal already have the ins and outs for both effect loop and front of amp? Or is it even needed at all?
Great vid Mason! I admit to being clueless regarding the necessity of an additional buffer aside from what my pedals already contain. I'm sold on that Vertex, it really opened up the sound without changing the tone at all. Does the need for a buffer apply if I'm running a wireless system?
I’m using a Radial Engineering SB-6 stage bug at the end of my stereo effects, using / blending 2 heads, it’s to help with ground loop problems I’ve had it works great. BUT, the SB-6 has 600 ohm output & I think I’m loosing some signal driving it all the way back to the amps effects loop return. I tried a TC Electronic pedal after the stage bug it seemed to give me some “more” but re introduced ground loop issues. Am I going to have to get 2 separate stand alone buffers after my stage bug ? Or is the sb-6 stage bug enough to drive the 20 foot good cables I use ?
super interesting, didn't think buffers mattered this much most interesting to me actually was i liked the reference most haha Question though: Does this matter (as much) if I play slightly or less slightly dirty? Do I still need a buffer if my Klon is always on anyways?
just a question, I have a TC Electronic Bonafide buffer at the beginning of my pedalboard, then at the middle there's my Mosky pure buffer (150 ohms output impedance) then at the end of my signal chain is my Boss RV6. Would my Bonafide buffer can make all my pedals buffered at 100 ohms impedance? Thank you
I have a TC Electronic Hall Of Fame at the end of my chain which I think has exactly the ohm etc mentioned the only other pedal I have that is buffered is a Morley 2020 classic wah and between them they seem😏to do the job🤘and although I'm planning on getting a Boss RC5 looper which would obviously be at the very end of my chain i think tgey have really good buffers I think it has lke 1m ohm input and 1k ohm output impedance so 🤞🤞🤞
The vintage pedals had transistor BJT buffers if you look at most 80s pedalboards used DOD pedals and Boss pedals and if you had 5 pedals turned off that = 5 buffers stacked chained together. You never mention or talk about stacking different types of buffers and what happens. If you watch SRV El MoCambo the tube screamer is turned off with a 10ft, 20ft cable to the Fender Superreverb and Fender VibroVerb with both amplifiers have the bright switch turned ON. The cables capacitance + the amplifiers bright switch capacitance = a cut off frequency. The cable capacitance is an addition picofarad and RC network added to the output jack of the tube screamer but also added to the input jack of the amplifier.
Mason's given me a ton of great tone advice. Here's a video that really points out how longer and longer cable lengths change/color your tone. Up to about 40 feet of cable, no real effect. But more than that AND add all the capacitance of your pedals, the effect is huge. Getting one of the high quality buffers that Mason recommended made my 40 feet of cable plus 6 pedals sound exactly the same as plugging my guitar straight into my amp with a 10 ft. cord: th-cam.com/video/u2sjeVQpS94/w-d-xo.html
My polytune mini is a good buffer in itself if i use the tuner function or not it buffers's the signal... And who the hell uses a clone as a buffer...? That's worse then use it as a boost without gain...
Man probably still on the hunt for a transparent overdrive too. Lol It's the final tone that matters. Who cares if your buffer isn't perfectly neutral? Boss buffers are fine. This is such pedantic BS.
ok, here is the question. i know i know, 1m in, 100 out, good buffer not the same as 'bufferd' pedal. good buffer better signal transport and so on. it's easy to understand. but, what is good? or why is good? i think buffer circuit is not complex thing to design, few components and jacks, blah blah blah. why mesa boogie's or your buffer is better than other brand's? better components? better design? or what? what makes a 'good' buffer? you've done over 15 videos about buffer, if buffer is that good, and why so many professional player's pedalboard not using buffer? it is not some type of overdrive or delay pedal, it's 'globally' good to any pedalboard. even more people using switcher with way more cables than buffer. i mean, 'good' buffer that you talk about. i don't understand.
Want more proof that buffered pedals aren't substitutes for stand-alone buffers? They're the same size. You think Boss crammed an entire effect AND full buffer into the same enclosure?
Open it up; a buffer takes very few components, you can fix them inside a jack / socket. Bigger or more parts does not automatically translate to better.
@@johncaldwell881so in small words you’re saying that your annoyed that he’s annoyed ? In that case, why should the fact that he’s annoyed, annoy you. Wouldn’t you being annoyed about him being annoyed be contradictory to what you stand against, which is being annoyed?
People that get annoyed by a message usually haven’t realized its importance. It’s business and proof that his product actually works. And so does his clickbait because it seems you haven’t become too annoyed to stop watching his videos😊
RECCOMMENDED BUFFERS:
Vertex Buffer Interface: shorturl.at/h1569
Mesa Boogie High-Wire: bit.ly/2lZwS0s
Axess Electronics: axesselectronics.com/collections/connect
Suhr Buffer: a.co/d/i7RrVlg
Vertex Boost: shorturl.at/abdiE
If you have active( EMG) pickups would you even need a buffer in the case of 2x10foot cables and 8-10 pedals with patchcables?its low z from the get go right?
What do you think of the Goodwood Audio "The Interfacer TX" in terms of it's buffer quality?
Do you no longer recommend the TC BonaFide buffer?
One of the best explanations comes from Mike Fuller: " Although my ears always told me that it sounded “tinny” and that there was signal loss, with the help of a my favorite Electronic Engineer (using some very expensive test equipment) we recently documented that each unity-gain FET buffer actually cuts the gain somewhere between 0.3 to 0.6 dB. This loss of gain is in the low-Mids and Bass frequencies, resulting in that “tinny” sound now that the highs remained and some of the bass and mids are gone. Now factor in that there are two FETs per pedal required to couple the IN & OUT path, that’s an obvious loss of between 1dB-2dB per pedal.
What’s an even bigger issue with this old style unity-gain FET bypass?
It kills dynamic pick response, i.e. it kills the difference between picking soft and picking hard…Yes, when the pedal is in bypass! This to me is a deal-breaker, and while I’ve always felt this to be the case, it’s great to be able to actually see it on the scope."
It would be interesting to have the sound reference through the 10 foot cable added to the 40 foot cable as well. This way we could hear the signal losses before activating the buffer.
I took your advice and put a TC tuner buffer after the old school whah (first pedal) and a TC buffer at the pre amp input - after all the pedals and cables. It was like lifting a carpet off the speakers! Always GREAT vids!
Here is a question: on a ampless pedal board that has an amp going into a wet section like an H90 or Big sky. The wet section being the last in the chain. How would you suggest handling the end of the chain? (Examples: Kemper player>wet section >Buffer>DI>FOH or Kemper player>Wet section>Active DI>FOH)
Vertex and the tube screamer sounded the most natural to my ear. Klon sounded the worst.
Really!? I though the TS was pretty mid-range. To me it sounded similar to the Klon.
How curious, huh? ... The Klon sounded the best to me. But the best to me is not necessarily equal to the most natural to you. All in all, I guess it's up to taste after all.
@@chipcaronteit probably depends on how many pedals are in the chain, which amp are using, guitar...
@@emdblues for sure.. It's the sum of all things after all.
@@VertexEffectsInc My reference point is: JMP 4-input, top of channel I, Volume on 10, Volume II up 3/4 because it adds some weird interaction. No pedals. 4x12 G-12M/25. That might be a mid-rangey setup to most, but it cuts through nicely. Every other amp/pedal combo I do (30+ amps, 75+ pedals) is me just trying to emulate that sound. What I mean when I say "natural".
Thx Mason, you really are the Rig doctor
Great info, thanks! You're obviously going for a dramatic look in the lighting, but a slash of light across the guitars would look great.
I have always been wary of pedals that have a random buffer in there. I want the effects pedals to determine tone and not some random buffer. Thx for the video
Hi Mason. I just wanted to mention that my new Ultraphonix is a game changer. I left the pesky tube amps at home and ran it into a JC40. AMAZING TONE!! Thanks brother!
Mason! Thanks for this. Great insight! I really hate the TS buffer before a procorat or a big muff...
Fantastic video. Truly great in every way. Thank you.
I used the Vertes FX DIY plans for a 4 cable method buffer - and it is awesome! And yes, it makes a HUGE difference.
Great video. I listened with headphones and just wanted to say I like the sound of the room you’re in. It’s pretty live for a TH-cam video and sounds great with Masons voice.
The funny thing to me is that the worst sounding buffer in this comparison (in my opinion) was the Klon Centaur, the most expensive pedal here by far. The BOSS and Ibanez buffers definitely weren't perfect, but the Klon really did a number on the tone.
I think that 29 Pedals are brilliant and they have EQ built in
Yeah, it’s not a buffer. There should be no EQ.
@@VertexEffectsInc the EUNA is a buffer and yes it has EQ, but still a fantastic buffer. It always a matter of taste 😊🍺
Great video, I recently purchased a Lehle Sunday Driver, although it is no longer in production (there is a SD2), it has excellent characteristics,1M/150ohm,and what is more important in the buffer, there is no loss of high frequencies when reducing the volume of the guitar!
I use the Boss TU3 and I have amazing guitar tone thanks to it's buffer.
So, I was hoping I wouldn’t have to get a buffer. Haha. I was going to buy a volume pedal this weekend but I should probably get a buffer. I play post rock, post metal, and ambient so no pedals isn’t an option for me. But, I plugged straight into my amp the other day and everything about the signal was better. Louder, fuller, stronger, ha.
Michael Buffer is probably my favorite buffer
let's get ready to ramble‼️😆😆
I’m into Jimi Buffer
90% of players will never her any difference in any buffer over a different.
BOSS pedals are buffered and all work exactly as designed.
Zero loss, zero added, not to a human ear.
I could be wrong but I think this TH-camr is trying to clickbait for clicks and views. Many guitar TH-camrs are getting aggressive with hot takes clickbait
Can you not hear it in this video demo? It's pretty obvious, but most 'players' are sitting in their bedroom and not driving 50 foot cables to an amp.
@@Les537 hey fucker, long cable...turn up the volume on your amp a tiny bit, turn up the treble. Wow.
I heard the analogy that buffers are like taking a wide hose with a mild flow, and shrinking the size of the hose until the same flow becomes higher pressure. Is that right? To my ears it sounds like they’re eliminating a lot of headroom that harmonics exist in which would fit with this model. I find that something very pleasing is eliminated, not in the actual note itself but in the space around it, the atmospherics and so on, and it becomes too focussed. I also don’t understand the need for them now, the best guitar music is in the past and most of it was made without buffers… and it sounds amazing.
What if I’m playing wireless ?
How about the TC Bonafide buffer? Good enough?
Great video I enjoyed the information. I play Fender bass guitars a Percission and Jazz bass. I recently bought a Gater Case Pedal Board to use for my pedals. I need help with the order. First I have a TC Electronic Tuner, Second a Storm King pedal , 3rd Aguilar Envelope Filter, 4th Aguilar Grape Phaser, 5th Aguilar Chorusaurus, last a MXR Envelope Filter all pedal are in a ISOPT Power Supply. Im planning on purchaseing. Aguilar Octamizer and a Fuzz Pedal but Im not sure if I have them in the right order because sometimes my MXR will not engage properly. Do I need a buffer for these? Im using 10ft gold tip cables Please Help Me Rig Doctor Im a female and dont know if I have it right. I play through a Fender 500W Bass Amp. Please Help. Thank You In Advance.
I have the MI Audio Boost n Buff V1 rising sun pedal at the start of my chain and a Mosky Pure buffer at the exit on my board. I think this is adequate but certainly no expert. How does that rate as far as you're concerned?
Mason, I'm about to buy the Vertex Tour Elite and build it for my home hobby W/D/W setup. I'm basically just doing the guitar with the dry effects into amp cab, pulling a line out from my power station to my micropitch pedal and from there through my time based effects in stereo to my stereo power amp. I want to add the Vertex buffer to the board but how do you wire up the W/D/W through the buffer when you basically have a dry effect chain to the dry amp but then have a stereo chain to the stereo power amp? I see a couple of diagrams on Sweetwater but they basically don't seem to show this basic W/D/W setup on there. It shows a mono, stereo and a 5 cable method. Any insight?
Mason, nevermind, I figured out how to do it using that stereo diagram. You just take the line out from the power station straight into your first pedal then it splits to stereo and on through the stereo portion of the buffer. Your mono just continues on to the amp head from your dry effects. Duh!.
Silly question…
Does the DIY mono buffer with tuner out or the buffer you sell direct also work for bass?
I ask because the JHS buffer states it’s not meant for bass on their product page.
None of the buffers matched the reference’s “bounce” and treble in the bass strings. However the Klon’s was noticeably the worst. I could live with the Boss or Vertex ones.
Did the vertex buffer sound a bit harsh to anyone?
Always a lot of valuable information . Thk u very much
Mason, is there a mini EQ that you would recommend? Thank you. Love your content
For a fairer comparison, I think u should recording a single audio sample and using that for all the tests. tks!
He explained why he didn’t do that based on a looper pedal. A recording would be the same thing. It would be a source with a different impedance than a guitar.
The vertex boosted the signal and compresses the signal a tad bit
Does anyone know how good the quality of the buffered bypass of NUX pedals is ?
Using the NUX_Sculpture Compressor as the first pedal on the board and was wondering if getting a Boss one would be a step forward.
Uncle Mason, I always use a Shure GLXD pedalboard wireless. I've heard this provides the "input" buffer. Would you still recommend an "output" buffer at the end of the chain? Thanks!
Impedance is different at the input than it is at the output and so is cable length.
Question, please inform. If I have a quality buffer at each end of my board but a mix of good, bad and no buffer on the board, are the good ones negated?
How do you feel about the buffer inside the EHX Nano POG?
where is the goodwood audio buffer recommendation??
The klon 100% sounded much brighter definitely a change in tone
Yeah it killed the lows and low mids noticeably
I have a question in regards to an acoustic board. I’m planning on building a small acoustic board with a reverb pedal and a LR Baggs Voiceprint DI. I was planning on putting the reverb pedal before the DI and having the DI go straight into FOH. Would you still recommend a buffer and if so how many and where would I place it/them in the chain? Thank you! I’ll be plugging in a J-45 using a LR Baggs Element VTC pickup into the small board
In the past, Mason has mentioned TC Electronics as pedals that have acceptable impedance numbers. Is that still the case? I have a TC tuner and reverb at both ends of my signal chain and it seems to work well.
Hi Mason. I have a TU 3 for the moment. Before I get a better one, do you recommend to put it before or after a Digitech Drop? Thanks
Your captcha does not load on Mac OS 10.14.6 after writing a message I cannot send it!
Mason , how do you feel about "29 pedals " "Euna " ?
It’s a great EQ pedal, not a buffer. Has a low Z output.
@ thank you !
I felt like that was the case but ut was hard to find answers.
Appreciate you 🙏🏽🐺
I started wondering about this and do you need a second buffer if you are using the 4 cable method and have pedals in the effect loop? Or does your buffer pedal already have the ins and outs for both effect loop and front of amp? Or is it even needed at all?
Great vid Mason! I admit to being clueless regarding the necessity of an additional buffer aside from what my pedals already contain. I'm sold on that Vertex, it really opened up the sound without changing the tone at all.
Does the need for a buffer apply if I'm running a wireless system?
Good question. I use a Line 6 wireless
What about wireless? Should they not go into a buffer?
I’m using a Radial Engineering SB-6 stage bug at the end of my stereo effects, using / blending 2 heads, it’s to help with ground loop problems I’ve had it works great.
BUT, the SB-6 has 600 ohm output & I think I’m loosing some signal driving it all the way back to the amps effects loop return.
I tried a TC Electronic pedal after the stage bug it seemed to give me some “more” but re introduced ground loop issues.
Am I going to have to get 2 separate stand alone buffers after my stage bug ?
Or is the sb-6 stage bug enough to drive the 20 foot good cables I use ?
super interesting, didn't think buffers mattered this much
most interesting to me actually was i liked the reference most haha
Question though: Does this matter (as much) if I play slightly or less slightly dirty? Do I still need a buffer if my Klon is always on anyways?
Good video.
I use a torpedo CAB for an amp, it's literally on the pedal board. How would you handle the output buffer?
Don't even worry about it unless you hear a loss of quality when bypassed then when you plug direct. It's mostly to pass through long cables.
just a question, I have a TC Electronic Bonafide buffer at the beginning of my pedalboard, then at the middle there's my Mosky pure buffer (150 ohms output impedance) then at the end of my signal chain is my Boss RV6. Would my Bonafide buffer can make all my pedals buffered at 100 ohms impedance? Thank you
Crazy how much of a difference I noticed and that's with TH-cam dumbing down the audio. Imagine was it sounds and feels like it the room!
Hey Mason, correct me if I'm wrong, if I turn another pedal on, after my TS, does that defeat the buffering that comes from the TS?
Do you use IC or transistor buffers?
Is the buffer in the peterson strobostomp mini tuner any good?
best one for me is the cornish LD3
I have a TC Electronic Hall Of Fame at the end of my chain which I think has exactly the ohm etc mentioned the only other pedal I have that is buffered is a Morley 2020 classic wah and between them they seem😏to do the job🤘and although I'm planning on getting a Boss RC5 looper which would obviously be at the very end of my chain i think tgey have really good buffers I think it has lke 1m ohm input and 1k ohm output impedance so 🤞🤞🤞
Can the buffers on all these other pedals be bypassed so as to only use the best buffer?
Some pedals allow you to turn it off, like the OCD. Some don't - like the Klon clones.
where is the sound of using 40 ft cable without any buffer?😅
That would be the reference sound.
The vintage pedals had transistor BJT buffers if you look at most 80s pedalboards used DOD pedals and Boss pedals and if you had 5 pedals turned off that = 5 buffers stacked chained together. You never mention or talk about stacking different types of buffers and what happens. If you watch SRV El MoCambo the tube screamer is turned off with a 10ft, 20ft cable to the Fender Superreverb and Fender VibroVerb with both amplifiers have the bright switch turned ON. The cables capacitance + the amplifiers bright switch capacitance = a cut off frequency. The cable capacitance is an addition picofarad and RC network added to the output jack of the tube screamer but also added to the input jack of the amplifier.
Mason's given me a ton of great tone advice. Here's a video that really points out how longer and longer cable lengths change/color your tone. Up to about 40 feet of cable, no real effect. But more than that AND add all the capacitance of your pedals, the effect is huge. Getting one of the high quality buffers that Mason recommended made my 40 feet of cable plus 6 pedals sound exactly the same as plugging my guitar straight into my amp with a 10 ft. cord:
th-cam.com/video/u2sjeVQpS94/w-d-xo.html
My polytune mini is a good buffer in itself if i use the tuner function or not it buffers's the signal...
And who the hell uses a clone as a buffer...? That's worse then use it as a boost without gain...
Buffers... yeah...the family got a lot of buffers.
Buffer in front buffer in back
Man probably still on the hunt for a transparent overdrive too. Lol It's the final tone that matters. Who cares if your buffer isn't perfectly neutral? Boss buffers are fine. This is such pedantic BS.
Because we all use 40ft of cable… 🤨
I scanned the title as "What makes a great BLUFFER?" I presumed it was a clip about Don 'Desperado' Henley
ok, here is the question.
i know i know, 1m in, 100 out, good buffer not the same as 'bufferd' pedal. good buffer better signal transport and so on.
it's easy to understand.
but, what is good? or why is good? i think buffer circuit is not complex thing to design, few components and jacks, blah blah blah. why mesa boogie's or your buffer is better than other brand's? better components? better design? or what? what makes a 'good' buffer?
you've done over 15 videos about buffer, if buffer is that good,
and why so many professional player's pedalboard not using buffer? it is not some type of overdrive or delay pedal, it's 'globally' good to any pedalboard. even more people using switcher with way more cables than buffer. i mean, 'good' buffer that you talk about.
i don't understand.
Lehle!
Buffers are just nuisance, just turn all shits to 10, that's it. Those are just marketing insidious machinations.
Want more proof that buffered pedals aren't substitutes for stand-alone buffers? They're the same size. You think Boss crammed an entire effect AND full buffer into the same enclosure?
Open it up; a buffer takes very few components, you can fix them inside a jack / socket. Bigger or more parts does not automatically translate to better.
That guy is so annoying with his buffers…
You know you don't have to watch the video, right?
@@basiltiffani8850 all his videos have the mention of buffer in it
Why does he have to be annoying to you? He’s just trying to educate
@@johncaldwell881so in small words you’re saying that your annoyed that he’s annoyed ? In that case, why should the fact that he’s annoyed, annoy you. Wouldn’t you being annoyed about him being annoyed be contradictory to what you stand against, which is being annoyed?
People that get annoyed by a message usually haven’t realized its importance. It’s business and proof that his product actually works. And so does his clickbait because it seems you haven’t become too annoyed to stop watching his videos😊