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I am trying out the Overloud TH-U amp sim and it's very good. I think I will probably buy it.
But it comes with a cabinte that is an impulse response loader rather than one of the standard cabs, which is nice, but I don't know much about IRs, other than they represent a speaker in a cabinet, microphone, room, mic preamps etc.
I get them and I want to start playing with them. But I am confused why
there is space (in the TH-U IR loader) for two IRs. I don't get why you
need two (or more in some third-party loaders I have read about)
spaces. Can anyone explain what benefit it is to have more than one IR loaded at a time please? Is it some sort of A/B testing thing?
Thanks,
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Comments
SM57 gets a lot of detail, and 421 gets a lot of the boomy bottom end. Something you sometimes need.
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Using two mic positions is kind of looking for the "amp in the room" experience as well - if you're playing an amp your ears are not going to be 1" away from the speaker so wherever you are stood out at playing you'll hear a mixture of the amp sound and the room's reverb, do you can mix IRs to get that feeling to a greater or lesser degree
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