jjguitar wrote:Nerv69 wrote:thx! does buffer size affect the sound of the guitar?
I have set the buffer size to 96 with 41000Hz sample rate. This gives a very low latency which FEELS better when playing. So I would say yes.
But it wouldn't change the frequency balance of the processed signal (or so I would think). So a user who perceives too much low end in their signal will probably not alter that perception by changing the buffer or sample size.
The frequency balance of one's tone is dependent on a large number of factors: the guitar itself, pickups, strings, amp and amp settings, cab and microphone choices .... This is why people
choose different guitar types, pickups, strings, amps and EQ settings, cabs, microphones, etc. and etc. Any AmpliTube preset had to be created by a particular player with a particular guitar (and pickups and strings, etc.), and thus that preset will sound at least subtly -- but perhaps dramatically -- different when used by a different player with a different guitar, etc. A preset created by a player with a single-coil guitar, light strings, in standard tuning is going to sound different when used by a player with humbuckers, heavy strings, tuned to C standard, etc.
In this sense, a preset can only be a starting point. If you think there's too much low end, use any one of a number of techniques to reduce the low end: use a pedal that cuts low-end (and/or bumps mids), change the amp settings, choose a mic and/or cab with less low end, etc. and etc. If you think there is not enough low end, do the opposite: choose settings or gear to boost low end. This is, after all, what recording engineers do.