I liked the video, even though it's not for me. Brett, you have a handle of all this tech really well, but for me, older than you i'm guessing, 54, i just want to plug in and play with standard amp type controls and a pedal board. however, I am moving a little more modern by going a Friedman IR-D and a fender fr10. seems like a good way for me to lose some kg and gain versatility in DI to desk etc. I only have one amp, and it won't get sold, due to the history we have with each other, but there's some really cool stuff coming up for the likes of me.
Nice one! I honestly cannot see any advantage (for me) over my MG30. The sounds are great on the Boss unit and the latency is likely to be slightly better than the Nux but I have been playing digital since the 80s so 2 millisecs on the Nux still feels fine lol.
I’m the same with the Valeton GP200LT - the differences between all these units are so small that it’s not worth shifting from one to another, unless we can’t control ourselves in the insatiable longing for something new. The only thing that appeals to me about this is the dual amp option.
Got the MG and the GP. Cut over to NAM on iPad with GigFast Lite. The Dimehead player has .5-ish latency. Got GAS? Dimehead has dual amps now as well. Serial but not parallel. Best Regards and Best Wishes!
@@slawsonscot How do you like your Valeton GP200LT?I have a NUX MG30 but was also thinking about getting the Valeton GP200LT,I am looking for some better high gain tones,with my MG30 you really have to dig in with EQ to get decent high gain tones,from the demos i have seen of the Valeton GP200LT i think the high gain amp models sound better,what do you think?
@@jimsimmons2674 I’m more blues rock so I’d be the wrong person to ask to be honest. I had the cheapest NUX mg for a while and thought it was excellent, then went over to the ampero one which was ok, but I’d say that in terms of build quality and user interface the Valeton is exceptional. It’s the first unit tone wise that I’ve plugged directly into the pa and been totally satisfied with the tone even before I’ve tweaked it much, which for me is a good sign.
Sounds pretty good, I must admit. When I first got a Line 6 Pod, I was also very keen to play it endlessly (as you are with this GX-10), but I really grew tired of it because eventually I came to notice a lot of undesirable digital artifacts in the sound. I realised that I actually didn't like the raw amp sim sounds, I was more enamored with the onboard effects that poured some sugar on the top. I think I'd find the same issue with almost any sim, but that's just me. Not to say they don't have their place, they are certainly very compact and convenient. Good demo, love that Strat too!