
- #WAVES GTR3 SUCKS UPDATE#
- #WAVES GTR3 SUCKS FULL#
- #WAVES GTR3 SUCKS SOFTWARE#
- #WAVES GTR3 SUCKS MAC#
Its 5150 model is also pretty terrific and the effects are top-notch. All three channels and every mode available on each channel. They model almost EVERYTHING from the amp. Best digital high gain amp models I've ever heard, especially the Mesa Rectifier model.
#WAVES GTR3 SUCKS SOFTWARE#
My favorite software by FAR for high gain tones has to be TH1 Overloud.
#WAVES GTR3 SUCKS FULL#
The Line 6 tones sound too digital to my ears at times, but it's pretty easy to cover some of that up in a full mix. Tons of guitar AND bass amps and effects, easy to dial in a fairly good tone, pretty good mic preamp models, too. Line 6's POD Farm software is neat as well. Pretty good pedal models, too, but what I like most is being able to add your own VST plugins anywhere in the signal chain. The endless amount of tweaking you can do. That's probably what Revalver is best at. The non-Peavey models are pretty mediocre to me, though you can do a hell of alot of tweaking to find a good sound. Revalver MK III has really good Peavey amp models if that's what you're into. Waves GTR? Well, they have really nice clean sounds but most of the overdrive/distortion tones sound really bad like they're focused around the 3-4kHz area. They do have really good pedal models, though, especially the overdrives and distortions. Really dislike the other high gain models. I also like the JCM 900 and 800 models pretty well. I love using it in full stereo.Īmplitube 3 has great Fender models in them, perfect for clean stuff. Guitar Rig 4 also has the coolest tape echo model I've ever heard. Simply hate the higher gain amps like the Gratifier and the Uberschall model, though. This is my go-to software for clean tones. Guitar Rig 4 has my favorite JCM800 and JMP sounds as well as really spot-on Fender Twin and Vox AC30 models. They've got other more profitable products basically.Okay! I've tried them all and I like each one for certain things. I actually met the support guy who always responds to my requests for new machine codes at NAMM one summer - he was very nice, and understood my frustration, and explained how the company works and why it probably wasn't going to get any better. Back in 2016 due to some complicated situations I had to do 3 of these, and I just gave up on the last one. And once you got the new code, it was still a complicated procedure to get it working. And very often OS updates would require the same. And then in the next OS X update, it fixed itself.īut what really made me stop using it was the song and dance you had to do to get it working after any kind of computer change - if you moved it to another computer, like if you bought a new one, you would have to email them to send you a new machine code. I remember one version of OS X where strobosoft was off by a exactly a step and a half - once you entered the offset correctly, it was fine.
#WAVES GTR3 SUCKS UPDATE#
And, it seems like every OS update seems to break something. But, their development/update cycle seems to only happen every 2-3 years, so if something breaks, it might not get fixed in any reasonable amount of time.

I used it, fairly religiously for many years - it's really great when it works.

It's possible by tuning the A (not within an infinite range unfortunately, then it would be easy) and then choosing the correct note, but that's a bit counterintuitive! The demo period on this plugin seems to be about 30 seconds, so it's a bit hard to tell! If I could just specify the centre frequency there it would be perfect.

The closest I've found so far is the KS Strobe Tuner. Failing that, a plugin that just gave me a Hz value would probably do! I suppose the ideal would be one where I could specify an arbitrary frequency in Hz, and then get a display of how close I am to it. I suppose maybe what I need is more of a frequency meter than a tuner.

I'm not necessarily making tonal music, or even necessarily tuning to equal-tempered notes. I want something absolutely as simple as possible - I've tried Guitar tuners like Waves GTR3 but they don't really fit my needs.
#WAVES GTR3 SUCKS MAC#
I'm looking for a really simple tuner plugin to use with my modular - I'm on a Mac and mostly using Ableton Live, VST/AU whatever is fine, but it does need to be Mac-compatible obviously. I'm sure this info is on MW somewhere, but I've not been able to find exactly what I need.
