Really helpful thanks. If I do this in Reaper and I'm half asleep or stressed, i normally end up with a tail on the render or i'm out by 1 sample. This is much easier. Now if I could only get the ESR down on my high gain pedal captures...
Thanks and yeah, that is difficult! High gain ESR is all about noise control. Using ground lifts or transformer isolators can be a big help. Do not use gates or denoisers. Try to find the best signal chain and the best gain staging within that signal chain. A Morley MHE or a Pinstripe DISO+ will do wonders for stuff like that. Also, setting your gain/distortion too over-the-top can really hurt ESR. Its like anything past "distorted well enough" is going to be too complex for the algo to properly emulate, resulting in lower than desired ESR. But experiment with what you have and listen to the results! The more you work on it, the better you will get :)
I've been really enjoying your videos on NAM, and it's clear it can make excellent Captures. Is there currently a way that such a NAM Capture can be easily turned into an IR that can be imported and used directly in a Modeler like an HX Stomp? I don't want to use the Capture from inside a DAW, as it would be much more convenient to use from inside a Modeler. I did briefly look at a ".nam" file in an Editor, and it doesn't look any kind of ".wav" file. So, I'm wondering how the NAM file plays the output of the Capture as audio in a DAW.
Hope it's not a silly question: Can I use any .wav file (even an old guitar recording) if I make it the exact same length as the v111 ? In order to get back a good sound I made without remembering what I used (amp, pedal) at the time... ☺
@@jasonzdora Well sorry, it is obvious that I haven't understood the process yet... (because I don't understand your question). Don't bother, I'll get back to you when I get it... Thanks !
i'm asking because i can use method "eq match" but to get same exact tone u have to research what amp was used in recording than add boost and then try to figure it out before making your own ir
@@Becek123 Feel free to experiment but I doubt you would get a good result by trying to recreate the DI track yourself. Way too many imprefections and that will result in a bad ESR. Its worth a shot, though! The only way I could see this being feasable is if you had the exact same DI and amp stem.