sir riff a lot said:
"I play at home and only need delay, reverb and maybe some chorus. I also need a tuner. Which of these two units would you recommend me and why?"
Forgive me for stating the obvious , but if you are only after 3x effects
could you not just use pedals ?
a chorus, reverb, delay and a tuner pedal ?
apart from tap dancing a bit more ?
I'm running a boss dd3, and an ashton chorus in my rm100 series loop
and they sound awesome !
And bduersch too I suppose...
Can't speak for him, but I initially wanted to go the pedal route. Several things weighed heavily against the pedal option for me :
1. Noise. Every mechanical interface is an opportunity for noise to seep in. So 3 pedals = 6 mechanical connections. Every inch of cable is an antenna just begging to pick up some EM interference.
2. Clutter. 3 pedals means three more wall warts and accompanying power cables or buying batteries in bulk. I'll go ahead and throw transportation in this section. I already 'have' to have a rack for power conditioning, the BBE, parametric EQs, and some day an M4 so I would rather get a unit to go in there vs having to tote around an additional item (pedal board).
3. Cost. By the time you buy three seperate pedals that have as high quality f/x as the G-Major, you're within spitting distance of the G-Major's price. In fact, most of the pedals I was looking at would have been more expensive (as a set) than the G-Major.
4. Flexibility. G-Major is all MIDI'ed up, the pedals not so much.
5. Bang for the buck. This should probably be 3b. G-Major has lots of f/x plus parametric EQ, compression, and a gate.
That's why I went with the G-Major.
I did spend quite a bit of time looking around for a rack unit with *only* rev, del, and chr, but couldn't find one. The closest was the G-sharp. I wish I had paid better attention in my DSP courses in college so I could make my own. I would have killed for a MIDI controlled rack box with only the big three and an assignable knob or two for each.
Thomas