REQ: Reamping step by step

fistula

Producer/Mixing Engineer
Jul 18, 2006
516
1
18
hi guys)

i'm asking stupid thing make some fotos of reamping process

i've never did it before

and what the chain must be for reamping?

instead DI box im using Numark DM1050 i think it must be the same thing that DI. am i wrong?
(i mean im using mic pre in this mixer)
 
I'm no expert but the impedance of a mic preamp is low, whereas this of a DI is high. Connecting your guitar directly, without the use of a DI leads to loss of high frequencies.
 
No. It's not the same thing as a DI. That's a DJ mixer.

here's a diagram of a typical reamp signal chain on this page: http://www.radialeng.com/di-xamp.htm

it's basically guitar > DI > recording interface, then:
recording interface > reamp box > amp > mic > mic pre > recording interface

To hear the amp tone while tracking the DI signal, you run a lead from the parallel output of the DI to the amp.
 
No. It's not the same thing as a DI. That's a DJ mixer.

here's a diagram of a typical reamp signal chain on this page: http://www.radialeng.com/di-xamp.htm

it's basically guitar > DI > recording interface, then:
recording interface > reamp box > amp > mic > mic pre > recording interface

To hear the amp tone while tracking the DI signal, you run a lead from the parallel output of the DI to the amp.

Would you need a DI if you were going into the instroment line in?
 
do you record guitars with reamping - is it the same thing that direct recording?

sparkyness

is there any other reamp boxes a little bit chippier?))
 
Yep, I reamp virtually everything - guitars, bass, even drums and vocals if I'm looking for a certain effect. I just record a DI track and later output it to a Radial ProRMP to an amp or POD XT. Works well for me because I live in an apartment and can't commit to a single amp (and don't have the room for a collection). In the past I've just taken my laptop setup down to a local rehearsal studio that has a decent room, hired or borrowed an amp and reamped the tracks. These days I'm just using it with the POD XT and using impulse responses for demos, but since I got my Fireface, I may go back to reamping an actual amp.

I have the Radial ProRMP which is cheaper than the Radial x-amp as it only has one output instead of two. The really cheap option is to use a passive DI box in reverse, this is how folks used to do it before dedicated reamp boxes came out fairly recently. I've never tried that method personally as I only own active DI boxes, so am not sure what the results sound like.
 
This is how I do it:

Recording

recordingji3.jpg


and reamping

reampingaq7.jpg


The POD XT Pro has a Reamp Input, so in case you have one you wouldn't need a reamp box.
 
do you record guitars with reamping - is it the same thing that direct recording?

sparkyness

is there any other reamp boxes a little bit chippier?))
Nice spelling by the way, hooked on phonics? just kidding, yea there are cheaper ways of doing this. The radial X-amp thing is really nice because its made just for this purpose now if you don't have the money just get a passive direct box and use it in reverse (1/4 in. output from interface then out to a mic) This is how I have done it and I've had great results. Someday I hope to pick up a radial but for now this works really well.
 
good luck man. i'm sure you'll find reamping to be pretty cool when you have the time to go back and basically re-record guitars with the ability to change mic positions and not have to have another perfect take. I reamped all guitars on my bands last album and i think it turned out pretty decent.

I rarely re-amp anymore however because bands come in and out so fast and don't have any money to spend on the extra time. But for serious projects its really nice.