![]() ![]() PEDAL BOARD SPLIT SIGNAL PATH FULLWhen you move to a full stereo setup, you will experience movement between the two speakers. This is great for creating some width and ambience. This gives you a wet/dry setup with one amp being totally dry and the other being totally (Or just partially) wet. With this setup, you can also play an effect, such as a delay or reverb, after the splitter but in front of one of the amps. The reason this is dual mono and not stereo is because the output signal going to both amps is exactly the same. In a dual mono rig, you can use an ABY pedal to split the output signal on your pedalboard to send it to two different amps. You get the added width of a stereo style guitar signal, but without the actual movement of stereo. The advantage to this setup is that it is simple, quick to setup and you can easily change amp or effects without needing to do much re-wiring or changing the overall flow of the signal too much.Ī great way to start using dual amps is with a dual mono setup. That means your guitar goes in, via your pedals if you have any, and out to a single guitar amp. The idea behind a mono signal chain is to have one continuous path from input to output. In this lesson we’re going to look at a few different ways to set up your dual amp rig. There are a few different ways you can use dual amps. ![]() One method that many plays like to use to help get a bigger guitar tone is using multiple amps at the same time. Each has a unique offering to your overall guitar tone. When it comes to building guitar rigs, there are a few ways you can approach signal flow. ![]()
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