OMG! Thank you!!! Just found you video. I’m using an acoustic with sh pup, no onboard tuner, EQ, 2 OD’s and a Metal Zone. Had 3 different tuner pedals at the front and they all popped and didn’t mute the noise. Placed a the tuner at the end and now it’s completely silent. Thank you!🙏🤘
when i export my midi files from ableton, they sound completely different (none of the same drum sounds or parts etc). Do have any advice for me? Thanks
Your humour always gets me, and how you present things make things interesting and entertaining to watch! On topic for the video: ring mod and octave fuzz are kinda similar to me, i would have challenges making a song with both. Sounds fun and frustrating!
@@DannyUnderwood I've tested it out! It's rad so far - but it's definitely a unique beast to dial in. The limiter is so unique - it feels like it squashes the high end when it's hit hard, and lets the low end take up all the space until it fades back in. It doesn't respond at all to my playing the way a standard distortion or preamp does - which is a good thing! It's very unique. I feel like the circuit interacts with the vibrato/phasey half of the pedal as well in interesting ways too, super cool.
I bought this used squire Strat HSS for about 150€ a few years back. Changed the two single coil for a couple Tokai, and changed the humbucker for a P90 I had from a mustang that I swapped the HH for a P90H setup. Changed the crap nut for a bone, and the tech hooked it up with a 4 point jack because the original was bonkers bad. I need to get into them guts next and I am seriously interested in the always on neck. After the stuff I did already I felt like I polished it up with the elixir of the gods, but I think after an always on neck mod it'll be like playing with the pick of destiny. By far you have become a top 3 guitar channel for me. Looking forward for the next one. Bad ass Jeep bt-dubs. You're living the dream!!
Thanks for spreading some good knowledge rather than repeating all the marketing garbo you see everywhere on the net. More people need to come back down to earth and give some real advice out here. The biggest changes are often cheap and quite accessible!
8:34 I have literally never seen anything cooler and I remember watching Vanilla Ice's Ninja Rap in my local movie theatre during the opening weekend of TMNT 2.
sooo good. I met one of the actors who played a turtle in that movie once, he walked around the comicon with the original costume head he wore so it looked like he was carrying around a severed turtle head. cowabunga.
Through whole video I wanted to post a comment that most important mod on strat is to put sticker on it, and you did it! 😂 Great video as always, keep pushing!
@@DannyUnderwood me neither but lately I order really lot of stickers for my supercheap squier strat, now I’m just in options paralysis, I dont know which ones to use 🤣
Fun intro, excellent production value, awesome playing, great on camera presence and very informative and entertaining. You've earned a new sub! Looking forward to seeing more of your videos in the future :)
It’s definitely a lot of experience to get good. Getting a good soldering iron made a HUGE difference. Being able to dial-in how much heat the iron has really is essential if you wanna make it easier on yourself.
Apart from this video being ridiculously high quality, I cannot agree more with literally everything you said in it. Also, Fender style guitars are BEGGING to be modded. Furthermore, totally agree that modding a guitar is the best way to grow close to it. I have $4000 guitars that I've modded. Have I messed up? Sure, but the problems are always easily fixed and the end result is so much better than just playing a stock instrument. P.S. Pickup height is the most underrated change you can make on your electric. It's just science.
I definitely had a tough time getting over modding high-end guitars, for some reason I felt they were too sacred. I had a 66 Fender Jaguar that was all original. It was such a cool guitar and I was scared to mod it to actually be useable in a live setting because the pick ups howl like a banshee with gain. So I sold it. I’ve definitely gotten over that now, while I love guitars, they are tools first and foremost. MOD EM
@DannyUnderwood I also have this weird thing where almost all my favorite guitars are mid level instruments that I practically gutted. Next step for me is fret work
ahh fun fact. In the video I sold that Suhr strat I had, because I had bought an Ibanez RT450 (you see it near the end as the example for neck on/treble bleed) for $175 that I liked that neck much better.
Hah, I enjoyed the humor on this one. Nice video. But also thanks for sharing good info! I am happy you mentioned stuff like pickup height, most don’t and I sure didn’t know until a couple of years ago.