PeteeBee wrote:Kpasta, quick question: is it a pain to move that? I imagine you have to unplug the walrus looper from everything to get it in the case? Regardless, that all looks epically enjoyable
Not a big deal really. I color coded the ins/outs for each loop and use numbered binder clips for them. The loop with nothing plugged in acts as a kill switch.
BoatRich wrote:Red Wing Harvesters? Awesome boots and board
Thanks... and close... Wolverine 1000 Mile boots (a little shorter than the Red Wing Harvesters). A Christmas present from my rockin' wife.
Also great boots! Your wife has awesome taste. What's the deal with that Fano? I've only ever seen them here.
There's a dealer here in Houston. I was lucky enough to try one out before ordering mine. I really wanted the hybrid Telecaster/LP/Gretsch thing (Fralin Tele Bridge + TV Jones Power'Tron Neck). It plays and sounds incredible... so versatile.
Is there any decent pedal planner that doesn't base it on brands and shit but just some boxes of general enclosure sizes or something easier to work with? I'm trying to plan my new pedal board but without having to just guesstimate and doodle, or take out the ruler and measure everything I have plus taking dimensions of everything online. It seems like a total pain to make a clean pedal board. I'm on a debate on whether I should try to make to seperate smaller board for my signal flow or one large board but making a pain to carry it.
BoatRich wrote:What's the deal with that Fano? I've only ever seen them here.
There's a dealer here in Houston. I was lucky enough to try one out before ordering mine. I really wanted the hybrid Telecaster/LP/Gretsch thing (Fralin Tele Bridge + TV Jones Power'Tron Neck). It plays and sounds incredible... so versatile.
Sounds perfect. That's literally a high end mashup of all of my guitars
sergiomunoz74 wrote:Is there any decent pedal planner that doesn't base it on brands and shit but just some boxes of general enclosure sizes or something easier to work with? I'm trying to plan my new pedal board but without having to just guesstimate and doodle, or take out the ruler and measure everything I have plus taking dimensions of everything online. It seems like a total pain to make a clean pedal board. I'm on a debate on whether I should try to make to seperate smaller board for my signal flow or one large board but making a pain to carry it.
Do you have access to Adobe Illustrator or similar software? That's what I use when planning out my board, I know everyone doesn't have access to the sort of stuff though.
Just need an app that can make rectangles that you can control the exact size of said rectangles and you're golden... just don't know of anything free off the top of my head. :face palm:
sergiomunoz74 wrote:Is there any decent pedal planner that doesn't base it on brands and shit but just some boxes of general enclosure sizes or something easier to work with? I'm trying to plan my new pedal board but without having to just guesstimate and doodle, or take out the ruler and measure everything I have plus taking dimensions of everything online. It seems like a total pain to make a clean pedal board. I'm on a debate on whether I should try to make to seperate smaller board for my signal flow or one large board but making a pain to carry it.
Do you have access to Adobe Illustrator or similar software? That's what I use when planning out my board, I know everyone doesn't have access to the sort of stuff though.
Just need an app that can make rectangles that you can control the exact size of said rectangles and you're golden... just don't know of anything free off the top of my head. :face palm:
Ooooo bb my girlfriend has illustrator, and I could totally use it. I'm not sure how hard it will be but that might be worth while to get most ideas finished. I'll check out the rest of the suggestions once I'm at home.
It's super easy dude. Just get the dimensions for your favourite boxes in mm, then create rectangles with the same dimensions in pixels. It's all vector graphics so it doesn't actually matter what size you make anything, as long as the scale is the same. But mm=px creates pretty decent sized images for a computer screen without messing around too much.
Inkscape is free and rad.
Gone Fission wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 2:21 pm
That’s quarter-assed at best.
goroth wrote:It's super easy dude. Just get the dimensions for your favourite boxes in mm, then create rectangles with the same dimensions in pixels. It's all vector graphics so it doesn't actually matter what size you make anything, as long as the scale is the same. But mm=px creates pretty decent sized images for a computer screen without messing around too much.
Inkscape is free and rad.
Exactly. I convert inches to cm in a 1:1 ratio. So if a pedal is 3.7 in x 4.7 in I make it 3.7 cm x 4.7 cm in Illustrator.