metalchurch wrote:Question to all: How do yins quell the extra noise?
Hey Joe, check out the angled pedal on the left side of my board. That's an ISP Noise Decimator. I've been pretty happy with it - very easy to use and easy to get a balance between eliminating noise and not choking the end of my notes. I could get away without it, but like I said, earlier, I like having it there for high gain (the VT can get a little noisy on extreme settings) and to take care of electrical interference with my pickups in some rooms. Kenny uses a Rocktron Hush in his rack and he's been very happy with it.
As Steve pointed out, I'm using a looper. That's to help eliminate some cable lenght, get some pedals with inferior buffered bypasses out of the main signal, and to switch on multiple effects at once - in this case, the Wounded Paw, Fission, and Muff. Not every pedalboard needs a bypass looper, but they definitely come in handy once you start putting a lot of pedals, especially true bypass pedals, on your board.
shadow wrote:You guys that like my board must be just like me... An anal retentive neat freak with just a hint of OCD.
I wish my board were wired more cleanly. I've drooled over some of the professional cabling jobs that Trailer Trash has done with their boards-
http://trailertrashpedalboards.com/. But a Trailer Trash board with a professional wiring job would probably cost as much as the pedals on top of it! Right now, my boards wired up with a mix of Planet Waves, George Ls, and Lavas. I mainly wired the loops up with George Ls, since the smaller plugs worked better for the Sends and Returns. I'd like to wire the whole board up with some .155 George L cabling, but the plugs for the wiring get expensive.
"He's the electric horseman, you better back off!" - old sKool making a reference to the culturally relevant 1979 film.