Why does my guitar sound better when plugged straight in to my amplifier as opposed to running it through a pedalboard without a true bypass strip?
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There are many factors that can cause the loss of frequency response problem.
You can attack the problem several ways.
Basically, your best sound will always be straight into the amp with the shortest high quality cable length available. Anything in the way has potential to mess with the signal. |
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When the guitar tries to feed a signal to some other device, the other device will, in a sense, "push back". A measure called "impedance" describes, at any given frequency, both the behavior of the input, which is "pushing back", and the signal source (which may respond to that "push-back" by pushing somewhat harder itself). The construction of some devices will cause them exhibit impedance which varies in "interesting" ways with frequency. Many modern electronic input and output stages, however, are designed to have impedance characteristics which are relatively uniform. If a guitar pickup with "interesting" impedance characteristics is passed into an amplifier which also has "interesting" impedance characteristics, the pickup and the amplifier may interact in "interesting" ways which would not occur with a guitar pickup that was driving a pedal input stage which has uniform impedance, nor when a uniform-impedance pedal output was driving an "interesting" amplifier input stage. |
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One particular effect or any? If it is digital effect sampling frequnecy ma be too low (and all A/D conversion related problems). If it is analog effect It is hard to say anything without diagram, maybe It goes through cheap designed output amplifier even it is off. |
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Often it's because of low quality cables and jumpers. There's also the fact that many pedals, when bypassed, still route the signal through the circuitry, which degrades the signal. Here's an article about true bypass and buffers that I think will answer some of your questions. |
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