Hobbayne Posted March 2, 2017 Share Posted March 2, 2017 I have been tinkering with some of the preset settings on a recently acquired Zoom B1. Some of them have quite a good sound. There is a couple of overdriven ones which I quite like, but the sound is quite muddy. I take it these presets have the EQ build in to them to achieve the sound. How do I set my amp to get the best out of these? I guess I have to set it all flat?? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
leschirons Posted March 2, 2017 Share Posted March 2, 2017 You can edit the patches and then save them to the "user" section. Setting your amp flat will then give you least colour but if you like your amp's usual settings, edit the patches to suit. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blue Posted March 3, 2017 Share Posted March 3, 2017 [quote name='leschirons' timestamp='1488496699' post='3249560'] You can edit the patches and then save them to the "user" section. Setting your amp flat will then give you least colour but if you like your amp's usual settings, edit the patches to suit. [/quote] That should work. However, I'm a pedal guy (TC Electronics & MRX). I'm still not sold on multi effects processors for bass/live performance. Even the newer units don't have the mojo of good pedals IMO. For recording and at home use you should be fine. Blue Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TimR Posted March 3, 2017 Share Posted March 3, 2017 (edited) [quote name='leschirons' timestamp='1488496699' post='3249560'] You can edit the patches and then save them to the "user" section. Setting your amp flat will then give you least colour but if you like your amp's usual settings, edit the patches to suit. [/quote] I read this a couple of times and think it needs some expansion. Once you have the patches in the user area you can edit the actual eq setting within that patch. I've not used the B1 but have the old zoom506. The built in effects tend to have things like eq and reverb added that make it sound really good through headphones but don't work very well in a band setting. I would copy across, make a note of all the values and then delete things like reverb and eq (if you can) then rest in a band situation. YMMV. Edited March 3, 2017 by TimR Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lurksalot Posted March 3, 2017 Share Posted March 3, 2017 I have a b2.1 and yes copy the nearest patch to the user section and fiddle away , RTM and it does explain the detail Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Number6 Posted March 3, 2017 Share Posted March 3, 2017 I ditched all my individual effects for a Zoom B1on which i always gig with now. I programme each patch per set list song.....sorted I genuinely believe the B1on is good enough in most cases as a gigging tool. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
uk_lefty Posted March 4, 2017 Share Posted March 4, 2017 I had the zoom bfx708 for many years, now just the old 506 for home practice. However, I haven't used my fretless a lot recently with the band so took it out with my zoom instead of my full pedal board. I'd say you need to watch out for volume jumps between patches, but if like me you just can't get your head around editing the damn thing just keep the amp flat-ish, worked a treat for me at rehearsal. Then again I was playing through an amp that I'll never like so I don't mess about with it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.