low pass especially
high pass too
gain before
gain after
and small format
and stereo. dual mono actually
does anyone make it?
Moderator: Ghost Hip
qersty wrote:Def would go with the kaoss pad for what youre doing. Honestly its weird that they dont have a hp and lp setting like isnt that like a classic dj effect? maybe it has program morphing idk. Have you considered *chough* tow kaoss pads? Like you could use them for alot more than just filters
Bartimaeus wrote:Most lowpass and highpass filters on guitar pedals are non-resonant. A lot of tone controls are just that – the rat's "filter" knob is non-resonant lowpass filter. They'll let you shape your sound, but not in the same way as boards of canada. The closest that you'll find to a stereo filter in the pedal world is a boss eq-200, if you set the sliders to simulate a filter. But it definitely won't sound the same either, and lacks resonance.
Do you definitely need stereo? It's pretty rare to find stereo filters in the analog realm, especially analog highpass lowpass pairs. If you're ok with digital, then a Kaoss Pad is definitely going to be your best option. If you need analog, maybe look at the minifooger drive or moogerfooger lowpass. Otherwise, you'll need to track down a Mutronics Mutator or build a small eurorack rig.
kaeth wrote:Could get someone to stack two of these Ibanez LF7 clones into one enclosure with dual-gang pots. It's not resonant though.
https://www.pedalpcb.com/product/lofinator/
D.o.S. wrote:Broadly speaking, if we at ILF are dropping 300 bucks on a pedal it probably sounds like an SNES holocaust.
friendship wrote:death to false bleep-blop
UglyCasanova wrote:brb gonna slap my dick on my stomp boxes
Gone Fission wrote:Can the Source Audio Spectrum or C4 do what you’re looking for? (I think but am not 100% that the Spectrum is a mildly nerfed C4, so it’s better to go C4 if you can swing it to have more possibilities.)
qersty wrote:You mean like the sherman filter bank? Idk if it does stereo but its a dual filter so maybe. The electrix filter may be an ok option too. Wondering if you maybe could mount two eurorack filters sideways if there are any case solutions for that but it shouldnt be that hard to diy either
Bartimaeus wrote:if you're mainly looking to carve out space for different sounds, then a stereo eq pedal is all you need. most likely boc did a lot of that curving during mixing, so they would have been using low and high shelf filters too. You can roughly replicate all of that with a graphic eq. though another big part of it is designing the sounds in the first place, which in the case of guitar would be rolling off your tone knob so you don't need to remove that treble later on. you don't need to carve out room for the bass if you never play low enough to interfere with it haha
it would actually be super easy to build a stereo non-resonant highpass/lowpass circuit. you can even make it passive, just using a dual gang pots and some capacitors. but you'd be better off making it active, or at least having some input and output buffers.
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