Hi all
Does anyone know of a very small and dinky digital reverb? I'm looking for something that I can build into the chassis or cabinet of an amp, and maybe even run off the heater supply with a rectifier and regulator. Basically like a sort of 21st century spring reverb tank, that doesn't need all those driver tube and transformer gubbins, and can offer other sounds too. (and doesn't go Sproinnngggggg if you bump the amp)
I started out with an old Digitech Studio Twin rackmount unit wired up to the effects loop. I think it sounds great, but it's never going to fit in the cabinet. It has loads of guts and uses a lot of power.
I checked out the Alesis Nanoverb and Picoverb, but they are a bit expensive and need 9V AC, and I don't really have room for another transformer.
I also saw the RA-FX3C module from Resolute, that is tiny, pretty cheap, and only needs 5v DC. But since it's only like $25, surely it's going to sound terrible
Another option would be the digital FX chipset that Alesis sell. I think it's basically the guts of the Picoverb. It's not too expensive and they have a good reputation for sound quality, but it needs a PCB made
Has anyone experimented with stuff like this before? I'd be interested to hear your $.02.
Does anyone know of a very small and dinky digital reverb? I'm looking for something that I can build into the chassis or cabinet of an amp, and maybe even run off the heater supply with a rectifier and regulator. Basically like a sort of 21st century spring reverb tank, that doesn't need all those driver tube and transformer gubbins, and can offer other sounds too. (and doesn't go Sproinnngggggg if you bump the amp)
I started out with an old Digitech Studio Twin rackmount unit wired up to the effects loop. I think it sounds great, but it's never going to fit in the cabinet. It has loads of guts and uses a lot of power.
I checked out the Alesis Nanoverb and Picoverb, but they are a bit expensive and need 9V AC, and I don't really have room for another transformer.
I also saw the RA-FX3C module from Resolute, that is tiny, pretty cheap, and only needs 5v DC. But since it's only like $25, surely it's going to sound terrible
Another option would be the digital FX chipset that Alesis sell. I think it's basically the guts of the Picoverb. It's not too expensive and they have a good reputation for sound quality, but it needs a PCB made
Has anyone experimented with stuff like this before? I'd be interested to hear your $.02.
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