Posted: Tue Nov 08, 2016 9:21 pm Post subject: Wet/Dry and 100% Mix Question
Hi Scott,
I'm going to experiment with a Wet/Dry setup after reading about your approach. I understand you use a preset that has some delay and reverb and is 100% wet...what are your thoughts on Wet/Dry without 100% wet effects?
I use 2 analog delays in series followed by a reverb followed by a looper (for layering anything from ambient backgrounds to harmonized riffs, etc.).
I love the idea of having my guitar signal in my main amp uncluttered by delay repeats, reverb tails and loops, so that I can get the best interaction between the speaker and my guitar (feedback, clarity, etc.).
Though in my situation, it doesn't seem that running the effects 100% wet would work. I could try running the delays and verb in parallel so that they are 100% wet, though the looper would then pose a problem as I don't want my loops to just be a wet signal. I also like 2 delays in series, and delay into reverb in series over parallel anyway.
What are your thoughts on running Wet/Dry and not using 100% wet effects? Any tips? Is there still a benefit in this case compared to just using 1 amp?
FYI I use a Fryette Power Station which gives me an FX Loop after both the preamp and poweramp of my vintage fender deluxe reverb, so with my current setup, my delays, reverbs and looper are in an effects loop just before the speaker (and utilize the Fryette's power amp rather than the pre/power amp of the deluxe to amplify the delay, reverb and looper signal)....Still, everything comes out of one speaker so I'm not sure this functions as good as a wet/dry setup.
So I'll chime in here and say that the idea of a wet/dry is that literally one amp has ALL effects and the other is completely DRY. The idea is that the speaker(s) on the "wet" side can focus just on the effects side of the signalsnd the "dry" side can focus on just that side of the signal. So if you have the effects AND dry signal trying to come out of the same speaker it's DOUBLE the work... the result from the wet/dry setup is a clearer and more "focused" sound...
If you have any dry sound whatsoever in the wet amp, you're going to have phasing problems and it'll sound weird. If you're using two separate effects, your only choice is to cascade one after another into the wet amp, or use a mixer before the wet amp. If your effects are stereo, you'd need a mixer and two wet amps, though I personally don't think stereo rigs are a good idea.
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