

Well, I will not list the available effects, that are going on their site to know and listen to some sounds. The price actually remained stable on this for 6 or 7 years i believe! The only other piece of gear i know of to do that is the Roland VS-2480 multitrack recorder.which stayed at 4500 € in France. Still expensive, but possibly the best for the money. Was 11400 Francs when i got it, that was the best price in France at the time.say £1140 or 1700 €. You can add crunch, or boost existing distortion, but this is not a SansAmp or a POD.no cabinet simulation here worth mentioning, that just wasn't the aim of the machine.but you want those luch choruses or reverbs then this is the way to go.

True, the price isn't comaparable either! -p It's still good, it's just not 100% the same.maybe only 95%? Anyway, incomparable with any Boss or Roland or Digitech effects i've tried.and i have tried a lot of those. The dynamics are good but not perfect: i still prefer going direct into a good amp, but if you accept that the sound is just different then you can enjoy it for what it is. The reverbs are amazing, of course, and you can use this for vocals or anything you like if you come in digital. Then again, you'll have that problem with any effects 's just that the others don't sound so good! p The effects are nice but you can be tempted to overdo it.because they are so nice!
#T.c.electronics g force manual
Great manual, that is even nicely made.not just some cheap photocopy look-alike, this is nicely bound & all.a high-class manual for a high-class piece of gear. You can see it wasn't designed like a TR-505 or an MC-303!
#T.c.electronics g force pro
There's MIDI in & out i believe, and you can easily set up a MIDI pedal board such as the Roland FC-200.the G-Force has a ready made template for it all set up.įor the price, i think they could have made this a 96 khz machine and/or have AES/EBU I/O's in addition to the SPDIF 's just not a pro machine without AES/EBU!Įxtremely easy to use, all is very very intuitive. So, unlike with other gear, you don't have quality loss when piling up effects, the quality remains optimal throughout.Ģ high impedance asymmetric 6.35mm jacks, 2 line level TRS outs on similar jacks.Ģ4 bit 44.1 khz conversion, but not sure the digital I/O's can convey 24 bit signals.someone told be that they were 20 bit.(check that, i'm not sure). It's digital, of course, with 8 processors, 1 per effects module. The flangers & phasers are lovely and the delays & reverbs are wonderful. This is a stereo preamp (with adjustable input gain on the front) with all the main guitar effects except a proper distortion. I'm sure there's a niche of customers who would adore this product, I'm just not sure I' m one of them. However, some of these sounds are very difficult to recreate elsewhere, and some of the ambient textures would be very useful for someone who makes ambient or very spacey music. I think that this is a ridiculously expensive piece of gear, and that anyone willing to shell out the money for it had better realize how frustrating and time-consuming it may be. I hate having to sift through a million lackluster or annoying settings to find the good ones. I love the wide variety of textures that can be easily created using this machine. For all of these wildly innovative effects, there are a ton that are wild and foreign but have no real practical application, which makes it frustrating to find the good ones. Playing two notes on some of these settings will produce an ominous drone that sits in the bottom of your stomach. Some sounds produce gorgeous, orchestral multi octave washes of sound that are very soothing. Some settings will harmonize, even pitch correct, every note that you play and continually loop sounds and replace them in a manner similar to a Steve Reich piece. Some settings produce wild harmonization’s and polyphonies that repeat in an ambient fashion from just a few randomly plucked notes. Some of the effects that this thing produces are jaw-dropping. Using it with a bass or keyboard would produce some truly freaky sounds, as running the guitar through this thing is enough to bewilder just about anyone. However, it is a chore for anyone who isn't dedicated to finding buried treasures.
#T.c.electronics g force how to
The manual does a decent job of explaining how to program and shift through all of these various effects. Each preset ranges from a basic effect (reverb, phaser, vibrato) to a complex combination of effects and algorithms. Getting through these sounds can be a huge pain sometimes, simply because there are about a thousand presets to choose from. This effects unit is a combination of reverb, delay, harmonizer/octavizer, vibrato, chorus, phaser, flanger, and almost any other effect except for distortion. The TC Electronic GForce unit is a multi effects rack for guitar.
