boss pedals setup
Pedalboard setup help?

What order should I put these pedals in to get the best tone?

MI-Audio crunchbox (Distortion)
Barber Tone Press (Compression pedal)
Line 6 Dl4 (Delay Pedal)
Line 6 MM4 (Flanger, Chorus, Tremolo)
Ibanez Stereo Chorus (chorus)
Boss NS-2 (Noise Supressor)
Vox Wah (Wah-Wah)
Ernie Ball VP. Jr. (Volume pedal)
Boss DD-20 (digital Delay)

Any help would be great!

If you ask me the best tone comes from your guitar,not your effects.But since you have the question,I would suggest your chorus/flanger effects to be in line behind your dist/comp.Volume pedal would be last.


Boss NS2 Noise Suppressor Pedal


Boss NS2 Noise Suppressor Pedal


$88.50


Eliminates noise and hum in guitar and bass effects and amplifier setups. Unique noise detection circuit preserves the natural attack and envelope of an instrument’s sound. Threshold and decay knobs allow for shaping the elimination/suppression as desired….


Boss BCB-60 Pedalboard?

i just bought this boss pedalboard & i have 4 pedals attached to it: Boss Super Chorus CH-1, Boss Distortion DS-1, a 1970s remake Fender Blender mix pedal, and a CryBaby Wah pedal. i have them setup in that order but whenever i turn on my distortion pedal i get a loud, irritating fuzz/feedback from my Fender 25R amp. idk if this is a problem within the DS-1 itself or something to do with the setup or the nearness of my pedal board to my guitar & amp. i would highly appreciate any answers or suggestions. thank you.

well if your getting fuzz sound that means there is a bad ground somewhere in the cables.

to eliminate guitar feedback : When standing near the amplifier, try and keep your back to it, or slightly to the side. Try and keep the front of the guitar away from the amplifier.

If your amplifier has an open back, then trying to have the amp not faving you will be hard, since the back will also generate feedback. In this case, putting some kind of foam in the back of the speakers to deaden it should help. However try not to pack too much in there. The amplifier still has to stay cool and the only way of doing that is the air coming in from the back of the amp.

Set your EQ settings to the middle position. This will give you a flat response with no colouring to the sound. Now gradually bring up the bass and treble for and see if you can get to your desired volume level.

Make sure that every component of your guitar is properly grounded (i.e. volume controls, tone etc.). Incorrect shielding or grounding problems are a causes of feedback problems.

Make sure that you don’t have any ground loops. These can cause feedback and noise etc.

Make sure that all pickups are correctly connected (i.e. That the actual shield is to ground).

If you are still having problems, then it maybe your pickups that are causing problems. Some cheaper pickups when made, are wound loose or the bobbins are loose, which can cause microphonic feedback. The only way of fixing this is by re-waxing the pickups. The pickups are dipped in paraffin wax, which penetrates the coil windings.

Another quick fix that may get rid of microphonic feedback, is removing metal pickup covers. By doing this, it increases the air gap, hopefully reducing the amount of feedback generated between the coil and the cover.

Try this Im a prfessional Audio Touring Technician. I hope this helps.

My Pedal Board Setup


Boss NS2 Noise Suppressor Pedal


Boss NS2 Noise Suppressor Pedal


$88.50


Eliminates noise and hum in guitar and bass effects and amplifier setups. Unique noise detection circuit preserves the natural attack and envelope of an instrument’s sound. Threshold and decay knobs allow for shaping the elimination/suppression as desired….


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