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IMPULSE RESPONSE LOADERS

LECAB 2 - NADIR - Mix IR 2

A cabinet simulator is made of 2 things:
- An IR loader, which is a plugin with various options,
- An IR, which is an audio file. This audio file is the sound print of the gear you wish to emulate. The IR is what will allow you to simulate the sound of the chosen cabinet, so its quality is essential if you want a good result. In fact, your cabinet simulator is merely an IR loader. Then you choose what type of cabinet you want to emulate.

How to use it?
That's simple. You pick one of the plugins below, for example LeCab 2, then you place it after your amplifier simulator, and you load an IR in it.

The cabinet simulators you can download below are provided without any IRs, so you have to find or buy them and load them in your cab simulator.
You may download free IRs, below, find some on the Internet (free or not), or make them yourself...

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LECAB 2

LeCab 2
LeCab 2
LePou gives us access to no less than 6 IR slots simultaneously! For each one of them, you can invert the phase if needed, set the delay time, configure a lowpass and a highpass filter, and of course you can set the pan and volume. You can also solo each slot, link the loaded IRs of 2 slots (but other controls remain independant). You can also control the latency. The lower it is, the more CPU-consuming it becomes and vice-versa. Last but not least, the graphic interface is nice and clean!

But why would I use 6 cabs at the same time?
Well, with only one guitar take, you can get six differents sounds, which allows you to get a bigger sound, or to obtain sounds that are impossible to achieve with only one cab, by using various IRs, modifying the panning or the other settings... You don't have to use all six available slots, but if you wish to experiment, you can. I usually use two IRs of the same cab but with different microphones, so it will simulate the sound of a real cab recorded with two microphones. And if I want a bigger sound, I can add more IRs. Very convenient.

One nice improvement over the previous version of the plugin, it now remembers the IRs' folders of origin. So you don't need to scratch your head anymore if you don't remember what IR was used when the IR name is not explicit.

Download: LeCab 2 (Rev1)
(Poulin_LeCab2_Rev1.rar, 849 KB)

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NADIR (web site)

Ignite Amps NadIR
Ignite Amps NadIR
NadIR is a free plugin from Ignite Amps. This Italian company makes and sells real guitar amplifiers, and they develop excellent amp simulations (demos on this page). NadIR allows you to load an IR in either available slots and modify the settings as you see fit. You can pick a mono, double mono or stereo signal, set the processing quality depending on your computer ressources, use high-pass and low-pass filters, set the delay and panning of your IRs.

Downloads

Please use the (official web site) to download the latest version, or download the older versions below.
PC VST 32 bits (Ignite Amps NadIR 1.0.2 VST PC x86.zip, 3.41 MB)
PC VST 64 bits (Ignite Amps NadIR 1.0.2 VST PC x64.zip, 3.45 MB)
Mac VST (Ignite Amps NadIR 1.0.2 VST Mac Universal Binary.zip, 6.65 MB)
Mac AU (Ignite Amps NadIR 1.0.2 AU Mac Universal Binary.zip, 6.73 MB)

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MIX IR 2 (web site)

Mix IR 2
Mix IR 2
This plugin was offered to anyone who bought the complete collection of Redwirez impulses. It's now been replaced by Mix IR3 that you can buy for US$ 52.95.
Please also note that Redwirez Impulse Responses are among the best on the market. Not free, but excellent.

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MESSAGES

(leave a message)

Messages page # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35



Gil
le 21/11/2010 à 12h44

Excellent site, merci pour toutes ces infos.



Marcus
le 20/11/2010 à 21h04

Super site, vraiment bravo, mais j'ai un problème, peut-être que je suis trop novice mais j'arrive pas à utiliser ce que je télécharge (fichier dll), pouvez-vous m'éclairer. Merci.


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<em>D'abord, je précise que tous les téléchargements que je propose sont pour PC sous Windows uniquement, pas pour Mac ou Linux.
Ensuite, les fichiers DLL doivent être placés dans un répertoire "VST". Soit un répertoire déjà existant qui a été créé lorsque vous avez installé votre séquenceur, soit un répertoire que vous créez vous-même où vous le souhaitez. Dans tous les cas, il faudra indiquer dans les options de votre séquenceur quel est le(s) répertoire(s) où se trouvent vos VST.
Pour cela, ça dépend des séquenceurs. Dans Sonar (le séquenceur que j'utilise), il faut aller dans "Options", "Global", puis l'onglet "Plug-ins VST" : c'est là qu'on peut ajouter le(s) répertoire(s) où l'on range ses plugins.
Ensuite, si le séquenceur ne le fait pas automatiquement au démarrage, il faut lui indiquer de scanner les VST présents sur votre disque dur afin qu'ils soient pris en compte et ajoutés à la liste des plugins que vous pouvez utiliser dans vos projets. Là encore, la façon de faire dépend du séquenceur utilisé, mais je suppose que le principe est toujours le même.

Grebz</em>



JPR33
le 16/11/2010 à 17h50

Ton site est une mine d'informations !
Bravo



JC
le 15/11/2010 à 11h55

Super site, très instructif.
Bravo,

JC



crisdalsace
le 21/10/2010 à 16h54

Bravo et encore BRAVO.

Salutations,
Crisdalsace

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