Finally someone who knows how to demo a pedal and play! Awesome tones. Love it how you used settings that most people find useful. If only more demos were like this.
Exactly! Especially when he can't keep up with the drums. And slow down the pace of the mind is not enough, if the fingers are rusty. This is disrespectful to the listeners!🤣
I really like the Bonedo demos. "No Talking" is the perfect format. But please write which bass was used. I've been missing that in all your bass pedal videos so far.
Nice. I didn't like the Bass control frequency choice and when I went to see what it was, the website (and this video) says 60Hz but the manual says 80Hz. Regardless, whatever it is it's too high and it created too much lower mid mud. Should be lower than 50Hz and close to 40 Hz. My opinion? You bet it is. Being able to put some sub-bass in the sound is a good thing. Anyway, a bass preamp of this quality and price should come with a sweepable bass or a sub-bass boost button because it's a bass preamp. It's for bass.
I agree. In tired of these companies telling us what we need instead of listening to what actually need. I'm a guitarist but what you have said makes a lot of sense to me. "it's for bass".
Absolutely - I am glad Tech21 reacted to that demand and put a switch on their Bass Driver Pedal to move the Bass knob to work from 80 Hz down to 40 Hz. Also the new NUX Bass preamp has the Bass knob set to 40 Hz. I like both of these pedals.
Pfft. It’s a peak value, but it doesn’t mean you don’t get response at nearby frequencies. You’re looking at numbers, not listening to sounds. Bass players are brought up to think that frequencies approaching infrasound are where the bass lives, but if you’re hearing mud then pull back on the low frequencies and concentrate on tinkering with your 400Hz-1kHz range. If you look at a Trace Elliott GP12 graphic you’ll see a 30Hz (or 40Hz) slider with a red marker on it that their manual will recommend that you keep on the negative dB side of the zero line, since they know that most human hearing takes place above those frequencies so if you push below 40Hz you’re making the speakers suffer and getting little real value in return. You also need a far more powerful amp setup to get traction from those frequencies anyhow, the parallel being evident in the fact that generally bass amps have had to be more powerful than guitar amps to compete for human audio responses.
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Finally someone who knows how to demo a pedal and play! Awesome tones. Love it how you used settings that most people find useful. If only more demos were like this.
I bought one and love it you can't get a bad bass sound live or on any bass or amp it's the best money i ever spent!!
same feelings two years later?
I love your videos. No BS! Straight to the point!!!
Exactly! Especially when he can't keep up with the drums. And slow down the pace of the mind is not enough, if the fingers are rusty. This is disrespectful to the listeners!🤣
I really like the Bonedo demos. "No Talking" is the perfect format. But please write which bass was used. I've been missing that in all your bass pedal videos so far.
This is extremely helpful -- thanks!
incredible video
We are curious to know what bass you have used and those details. Thank you.
Cool motif
jazz bass?
sounds more like a Musicman Stingray and nothing like Jazz Bass (from 2:20 sounds like a Precision Bass for a while but I still think it's a Stingray)
I'm fucking sold
👍🔥
Nice. I didn't like the Bass control frequency choice and when I went to see what it was, the website (and this video) says 60Hz but the manual says 80Hz. Regardless, whatever it is it's too high and it created too much lower mid mud. Should be lower than 50Hz and close to 40 Hz. My opinion? You bet it is. Being able to put some sub-bass in the sound is a good thing. Anyway, a bass preamp of this quality and price should come with a sweepable bass or a sub-bass boost button because it's a bass preamp. It's for bass.
I agree. In tired of these companies telling us what we need instead of listening to what actually need.
I'm a guitarist but what you have said makes a lot of sense to me. "it's for bass".
Absolutely - I am glad Tech21 reacted to that demand and put a switch on their Bass Driver Pedal to move the Bass knob to work from 80 Hz down to 40 Hz. Also the new NUX Bass preamp has the Bass knob set to 40 Hz. I like both of these pedals.
Pfft.
It’s a peak value, but it doesn’t mean you don’t get response at nearby frequencies. You’re looking at numbers, not listening to sounds.
Bass players are brought up to think that frequencies approaching infrasound are where the bass lives, but if you’re hearing mud then pull back on the low frequencies and concentrate on tinkering with your 400Hz-1kHz range.
If you look at a Trace Elliott GP12 graphic you’ll see a 30Hz (or 40Hz) slider with a red marker on it that their manual will recommend that you keep on the negative dB side of the zero line, since they know that most human hearing takes place above those frequencies so if you push below 40Hz you’re making the speakers suffer and getting little real value in return. You also need a far more powerful amp setup to get traction from those frequencies anyhow, the parallel being evident in the fact that generally bass amps have had to be more powerful than guitar amps to compete for human audio responses.