By doing so, you can play and record through the audio interface with BIAS FX 2/Amp 2. Technically, you need an audio interface (such as the RIFF) to plug the guitar into. Please refer to the below links for comparison charts: However, BIAS AMP 2 is certainly not required to use BIAS FX 2, which contains many great amps already, not to mention the thousands of amp options already in the BIAS FX 2 ToneCloud. Ukrainians have seen in a second new year under some of the heaviest aerial bombardment since Russias war began. It's possible to integrate your custom amp built-in BIAS AMP 2 into BIAS FX 2. It allows you to tweak and fully customize your own unique distortion, delay, or modulation pedal.) ( Bias Pedal: A pedal equivalent of the Bias Amp. It can be customized into your own unique amp, with an additional Amp Match feature. Also features things like Guitar Match, Looper, and more.īias Amp 2: In-depth tweakability for only the guitar/bass amp section. Most of the presets (at least for Heavy Rhythm) are quite unusable. The quick version is, you can't really ever know the answer to your question with serious precision.Below are the differences between each BIAS series product:īias FX 2: Wide variety of amps and effects, and allows very flexible configuration. Im able to get all of the sounds I want out of Bias Fx 2/Amp 2. In theory, one company could be better at the mathematical modelling part of the process, and another as servicing and/or choosing the units to be modelled beforehand, and that second part might end up making the bigger difference. Like some people will prefer to use an amp one way more than another, I've heard musicians prefer different companies models of the same unit. Modelled amps (or any devices) will have a general character that achieves a job for you as a musician/sound engineer. this is where most of your latency is coming from. The RS cable is using some sort of ASIO software drivers but your internal soundcard is using the Windows WDM/DirectX drivers. The best way to reduce the latency is to use an audio interface for both input and output. We haven't even looked into mics, location of mics, environment the amp has been mic'd in etc etc. You have to configure Bias FX or your DAW to use the ASIO drivers. We will always be talking about some kind of approximation. At the top of that list was Positive Grids BIAS Amp 2, a virtual amp designer packed with stunningly accurate emulations of a broad range of killer amps. There is no 'one' definitive sound that a model can be absolutely accurate to. So, which one of maybe several options here have been modelled in the first place? We don't know. I've had that opportunity more than once. I used the be retail manager at GAK (large music store in the UK). I really hope i got my point across with this question, i don't know how to paraphrase it better since i'm not an english native I don't know if you've ever had the chance to compare multiple examples of older valve (tube) amp with different model/age etc valves (tubes) in them, but there can be significant differences. Using my Mustang Micro as an interface I can plug my guitar in to the Amp program and play around with the different amps and hear the sounds through my iPad speakers. Is the actual "Default Preset" on the Pre/Power Amp and Transformer sections true to what the response and tone of the real amps are? (or at least as close as possible) Bias Amp 2, Bias FX 2, iPad Pro, Fender Mustang Micro and Spark Mini I’ve got the free versions of the Amp and FX programs on my iPad Pro. I don't want a subjective opinion about it, i know that i can tweak the settings however i want to get a different response from the sim, what i want here is an objective answer about it. How ever, it is absolute dog shit for anything high gain or metal It’s fizzy, shrill, and just bad. The actual settings that make the simulation as accurate as possible to the real deal or should i (for example) bypass the Pre and Post EQ of the Pre-Amp to get a more accurate, "not filtered" tone?: I own bias Fx 2 & AMP 2 Both in Pro versions (so everything is included) It does everything great, from jazz, blues to punk rock, classic rock. Yesterday while playing a random question popped into my mind: " Is the default preset of the pre/power amp and trasformer section accurate to the real amps?" I tweak a lot of settings while i run the plug-in, trying to find the "perfect" tone. The best thing to do is go with what works with your ear and put in the work. What ive learned is that if you spend enough time with EQing,the right tweaking and cab impulses, any VST will get done what you need AND want. I use Bias Amp 2 software on a regular basis to play guitar through my audio interface. Ive used Bias FX 2 for about a month now after a few years on Guitar Rig and some freeware based VSTs.
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