I know the "Nashville or Hilton" topic has been closed, but I never did see what the 3 cord or 3 chord method was. What is this method?
Wally
3 cord/3 chord method
Moderator: Dave Mudgett
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Wally Taylor
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- Location: Hardin, Kentucky, USA
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Mike Wheeler
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Hi Wally,
From a previous post...
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica">quote:</font><HR><SMALL>...on a NV112, for instance, that's plugging you guitar directly into the regular input like a 6 stringer would, then run a cord from the pre-eq send patch to the input jack on your volume pedal. Then another cord from the volume pedal's out jack to the pre-eq patch return. This can be done on the Peavey amps that have the pre-eq jacks on the front panel.
This was designed to eliminate the impedance matching problems caused by loading down the pickup with the pot that's in a pot pedal. It doesn't apply for pedals like the Hilton or Goodrich LDRs. They're already impedance matched.</SMALL><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Hope this helps.
From a previous post...
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica">quote:</font><HR><SMALL>...on a NV112, for instance, that's plugging you guitar directly into the regular input like a 6 stringer would, then run a cord from the pre-eq send patch to the input jack on your volume pedal. Then another cord from the volume pedal's out jack to the pre-eq patch return. This can be done on the Peavey amps that have the pre-eq jacks on the front panel.
This was designed to eliminate the impedance matching problems caused by loading down the pickup with the pot that's in a pot pedal. It doesn't apply for pedals like the Hilton or Goodrich LDRs. They're already impedance matched.</SMALL><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Hope this helps.