Nov 17, 2004 Sound sound Type. Plus-circle Add Review. Like on red vs blue original site? If there is, then i will instantly fll in love wit the person who tells me how. Reviewer: OtagoNZ - favorite favorite favorite favorite - September 29. And keep those Red bastards back:) =DAN THE MAN=. Oct 05, 2016 Red vs Blue Caboose Voice Pack. SOME OTHER RED VS BLUE VOICEPACKS CAN BE FOUND IN THIS COLLECTION! -Background noises in some clips (ambient noises that are in the background of the series pretty much all the time, other random sounds). It is originally in RedVsBlue, first season. Please add any number of audio clips from burnie from 17:38-18:10. Special Guest Jordan Moll - Vader's Vault Fury with custom sound font +2 - Is there a soundboard for Gavin.
I know, i should get both, but cant spend more money on pedals (last week i snagged a 3-button Plexitone to replace my broken Bogner La Grange).I would like to add a Bognerish flavour to my amp. The clean base that im goin to use is almost ideal: a diode rectified JTM 45 with KT 66, 4x12 with G12m Greenbacks, 2x12 with Heritage 55hz Greenbacks.
Since Reinhold designed the pedals with a Goldfinger clean tone in mind, i know that neither of two pedals could fail with my amp (the Goldfinger is JTM 45-ish). Thats a big pro.
I always set my amp with all tone/presence knobs at 10, bridge the inputs and balance the Bright and Normal channels (bright at 6 and normal at 4, PPIMV master volume at 3).I see myself using the Blue pedal with gain cranked, in blue mode, 20th structure, b2, variac off and a nice amount of boost engaged. My fear is that the Blue couldnt have enough gain to pull something like EVH Fair Warning/Driver Down tones. The open-ness that Blue seems to have is tempting, but ive read that the pedal gets live-lier at stage volumes, and im a small gig/bedroom player. In the other hand, the Red seems to have too much gain and not enough dynamics (well, compared to the blue).Here´s the tricky part: i aim for a distinctive tone, something between the EVH´s brown sound and Jerry Cantrell tone, almost reaching high gain levels (NOT chugga chugga modern, which i hate).So.what you think guys? Click to expand.What I meant was did you try and get a replacement for the La Grange? Bogner or the dealer?
Seems like while the LG was working it had the tones you were after. If QC is still an issue for you seems like there have been reports of bad switches with the Blue and the Red.
My Blue is going strong as is the LG. I would think Bogner would stand by their products under warrantynot so much when it has expired. This under the assumption you are shopping used. If it were me I'd go with a pedal known to have the sound I am after rather than a stab in the dark and going by others comments. What I meant was did you try and get a replacement for the La Grange? Bogner or the dealer? Seems like while the LG was working it had the tones you were after.
If QC is still an issue for you seems like there have been reports of bad switches with the Blue and the Red. My Blue is going strong as is the LG. I would think Bogner would stand by their products under warrantynot so much when it has expired. This under the assumption you are shopping used. If it were me I'd go with a pedal known to have the sound I am after rather than a stab in the dark and going by others comments. Click to expand.Yeh you´re right, but i have replaced my faulty La Grange with a 3 button Plexitone, which i liked a bit more for modded Marshall tones with MY amp (it can suck with the wrong clean platform). I would like to have another gain flavour, in the same ballpark than Plexitone/La Grange but with a dinstinctive voice to justify the purchase lol.PD: There´s a well known mod for Blue/Red´s relays if they fail.
That involve soldering a 10nf capacitor. An easy job but i guess that the 'old' Bogner pedals dont fail as much as the new La Grange. I´ve heard a few horror stories like mine and there´s no mod yet, since they have that 10nf cap installed from factory. Click to expand.I've owned and loved both, but the Blue stayed and Red went. The Red was cool for heavy and crunchy stuff, but it was never as warm and full and easy to dial in the mids as the Blue.
The Red was a good choice as a stand alone with a Strat live, but it didn't always record as well.The Blue does need to be cranked with Boost to get the goods from gain OR you can goose it with a booster, DOD250, etc - which adds way more to the chain BUT it's sort of like using it as a Marshall getting kicked in the pants when way many famous players used to do. If you want that brown sound, the Blue is the stronger choice but it's more work to get there. I've owned and loved both, but the Blue stayed and Red went. The Red was cool for heavy and crunchy stuff, but it was never as warm and full and easy to dial in the mids as the Blue. The Red was a good choice as a stand alone with a Strat live, but it didn't always record as well.The Blue does need to be cranked with Boost to get the goods from gain OR you can goose it with a booster, DOD250, etc - which adds way more to the chain BUT it's sort of like using it as a Marshall getting kicked in the pants when way many famous players used to do. If you want that brown sound, the Blue is the stronger choice but it's more work to get there.
Click to expand.Having owner both the Blue and the Red, I agree with this; with the Blue's boost circuit engaged, I recall that getting early VH tones out of my Hb equipped Strat into the clean channel of my Mesa Express 5:50 was never a problem. Plus, the Blue's ability ability to get sweeter low to mid gain tones with considerably less pedal noise makes it a better choice for pre 1985ish rock, methinks. The Red was a good higher-gain pedal, but considerably noisier than the crunch mode on the Express 5:50, which I eventually decided I liked better. I don't get the Blue being low gain thing and I pretty much use single coils. I have both the Blue and Red and tried the LaGrange but returned it. I tend to use the Blue the most into a semi clean amp. The Red has more gain but I find that pedal is too noisy unless the amp is really clean and has no boosts engaged.
Those clips in the video sound like the amp is not exactly soft so I would factor that in. For me the Blue has the biggest tone whereas the LG and Red have more gain but aren't as full range as the Blue. If you're using humbuckers the Blue in boost mode with the gain trims turned up should have more than enough.
I don't get the Blue being low gain thing and I pretty much use single coils. I have both the Blue and Red and tried the LaGrange but returned it. I tend to use the Blue the most into a semi clean amp. The Red has more gain but I find that pedal is too noisy unless the amp is really clean and has no boosts engaged. Those clips in the video sound like the amp is not exactly soft so I would factor that in.
For me the Blue has the biggest tone whereas the LG and Red have more gain but aren't as full range as the Blue. If you're using humbuckers the Blue in boost mode with the gain trims turned up should have more than enough. Click to expand.Agreed. I had the blue for a long time as my mid and higher gain pedal with singles into a totally clean amp, and had no problem getting that thing to scream with the gain around 2 o'clock unboosted. I only ditched mine because it wasn't doing it for me once I got the Bella. Buzzy and I wanted like 25% more gain out of it. The right amp and right settings on the pedal give it plenty though.
And I was playing stuff in the heavier sort of post hardcore and emo realm with it and copping some heavier Further Seems Forever sounds no problem. I had the blue for a long time and used to use it for boosting a cranked up amp. It worked pretty well for that but it just didn't have enough gain for me. The boost function was almost unusable for me, even with the gain and volume on the boost off it was still way too much boost for what I wanted. I play through a variety of amps and sometimes I need the pedal to do most of the work and other times I need it as salt and pepper on my steak. I just couldn't justify a $300 boost pedal. It had some amazing tone shaping available though, you could use it as an EQ tone shaper with some gain.I found I could get other pedals to do a similar thing for cheaper and with features I could use.
I did like the pedal though there's some great sounds in there. I've never owned the Red but I've played it a few times. A bit too gainy and compressed for me. I would love a higher gain Blue, maybe thats the La Grange? Haven't played one yet.