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QuestionWhat pedals should every guitarist have?Michael Papenburg is a Professional Guitarist based in the San Francisco Bay Area with over 35 years of teaching and performing experience. He specializes in rock, alternative, slide guitar, blues, funk, country, and folk. Michael has played with Bay Area local artists including Matadore, The Jerry Hannan Band, Matt Nathanson, Brittany Shane, and Orange. Michael currently plays lead guitar for Petty Theft, a tribute to Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.A basic setup for your pedals might be: booster overdrive pedals, modulation pedals (chorus, flange, Tremolo), delay pedal, and reverb.
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QuestionWhere should a noise suppressor be placed?Community AnswerIt depends on what purpose the noise suppressor will fulfill. You may need more than one placement depending on your purpose. If you position it behind the tuner, it will remove any unwanted noise from the guitar signal before it gets modified with the pedals (this is the most common placement). Guitarists also use the noise suppressor or noise gate pedals after an overdrive to cut the riff sharply.
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QuestionWhere should a boost pedal go in the chain?Community AnswerAfter the compressor, but before the gain (distortion) pedals. This will increase volume on clean tones and boost the drive on lead tones.
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QuestionShould a heavy distortion be placed before a tube screamer and a blues breaker or after?Community AnswerThis depends on personal preference; changing the order of drive pedals changes how they sound when used together. For instance, a clean boost placed before a heavy distortion or fuzz will result in a louder boosted signal hitting the heavier distortion circuit which in turn works that circuit harder and you get heavier distortion. If you place that clean boost after the heavy distortion, it will just make the original distorted sound louder. Experiment with different placement order and you will find your own preference.
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QuestionI have read that wah pedals can kill tone even when they are not active. Is this true?Hayden BCommunity AnswerYour wah is a link in the chain, but if it has true bypass when it's off, it should provide the same tone as playing without one.
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QuestionWhere should I put my equalizer pedal in the chain?Community AnswerThat really depends on what you are going for. There are good arguments for before everything and right after the tuner, but also for after the distortion and before your modulation pedals. If you put yours right after the tuner in the front of your chain, you can equalize your guitar tone before it hits anything and adjust your pedals accordingly.
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QuestionCan you place these in a workable order? Tuner, Overdrive, Comp/Sustainer, Chorus and Reverb pedals?Community AnswerThe common order would be Tuner, Comp/Sustainer, Overdrive, Chorus, and Reverb. Chorus could also add some echo so pay attention how you combine Reverb with it.
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QuestionShould a looper pedal be the last one put in?Community AnswerYour looping pedal should be the last pedal in your chain, assuming you want the effects of every other pedal to be part of what is being looped; any pedals placed after the looper will not be part of what is looped (i.e. if your reverb pedal is placed after the looper, your looped riffs will not have reverb on them).
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QuestionWhich way do I set them up, from amp to guitar?Jelke de JongCommunity AnswerThe way it's explained in this article; the first pedal in the chain is the one which you plug your guitar into, and the last one in the chain will go out to the amp.
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QuestionWhere in the chain should I put a reverb pedal?Community AnswerReverb can be treated like delay, so before the looper, but after everything else.
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QuestionIs there a place for a power input?Community AnswerEach individual pedal should have a power input or battery power. You can buy a single power (commonly 9v) source and a chain to power multiple pedals at once.
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QuestionHow should I set up octave pedals?Community AnswerThis depends on a number of things. Are you looking for placement in a series of pedals? If so, it should go towards the end of your chain. Are you looking at it as a functional point? If so, using an octave lower can give some hugeness to heavy guitar or might pull a fatter sound out of some higher solos, whereas an octave up is almost always great for a layering effect.
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QuestionWhere should a Talk Box be placed in the pedal chain?Community AnswerSame place as wahs, a talk box is a filter, such as envelope, auto wahs, etc.
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QuestionHow do I set up a Digitech whammy pedal?Community AnswerPlace the whammy right after the tuner. That way it can bend/transpose the guitar signal before any other effects hit it.
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QuestionWhy are delay pedals so much harder to adjust with a tube amp than a valve state amp?Community AnswerThe more dynamic an amp is, the more the delay pedal reacts to the input attack. For example, on a clean setting, the harder you hit the strings, the more volume the delay will sense and you will hear louder and more frequent repeats. The softer you hit the strings, the less you will hear the delay. With this being said, some amps have an effects (fx) loop that is not as loud as others. There are other amps that have a boost/cut button or knob to adjust the fx loop volume. Most tube amp loops are also buffered, which means that the signal is stronger and is being compensated with some of the higher frequencies that get lost when you have an extensive number of pedals or a really long cable.
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QuestionWhere should the amp simulator be placed?Community AnswerThe amp/cabinet simulator should be placed at the end of the pedal chain, as if you were connecting to an actual amp.
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QuestionAre these rules applicable in guitar effects processors, too?Community AnswerYes, these general rules do apply in guitar effects processors, commonly known as ‘effects chain’. The explanation above is a very good base to start experimenting with sound effects.
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QuestionDo you sell those pedals in the pictures?Community AnswerYou can buy all the wikiHow pedals from the wikiHow store. They are a good price and in my opinion, very nice pedals.
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QuestionI haven't ever tried using a guitar effects pedal, and I'm ordering a reverb pedal. How do I set this up?Community AnswerYou'll plug your guitar into the right side (the input) and have another cable coming out of the left side (output jack) that you'll put into the amp. You'll then plug the power cable into the slot (that likely will say (9V DC above it) and plug that into the wall. Turn on the amp and click the foot switch on your reverb pedal and you'll be good to go!
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QuestionWhere should I place an Electro Harmonix microsynth?Community AnswerThe microsynth is in the same wheelhouse as an octaver, but also has some modulated qualities, so I would put it either before or after your overdrives (depending on your preference/what kind of tone you're dialing in on it), but definitely before reverb.
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QuestionCan I place guitar pedals in a customized way?Community AnswerYou can technically put them in any order, yes. The order provided in this article is just the most sensible order. With other orders, you may get new kooky sounds (whether they sound good or not is up to personal preference).
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QuestionI have a wah pedal, Wampler distortion pedal and chorus pedal. Can I use the foot switch from my Marshall MG100 amp with these pedals, and should I put them in loop?Community AnswerYes, any of these pedals can go into an effects loop. Just keep in mind you can't use them if the effects loop is not engaged on your amp.
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QuestionHow many guitar pedals can I use at once?Community AnswerAs many as you want. However, turning on too many pedals at once may muddy up your tone.
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QuestionWhich are the best guitar pedals?Community AnswerThe ones that bring out your individual sound and style, and bump your creativity to the next level, are the best ones. The ones that take you to your happy place. Test a few out before deciding what works for you.
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QuestionWhere would you recommend the placement of a preamp pedal in the sequence?Community AnswerA preamp pedal should be placed quite early in your overall signal chain, and obviously before power amp or cab simulator pedals. As it’s a substitute for an amp’s preamp, it should therefore be one of the first stompboxes that your guitar’s output signal comes into contact with.
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