JeffBlue
Active member
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2012
- Messages
- 353
I'm not sure I would call the Revival drive an "amp in a box." It has to be set to work with the amp you have, and then it overdrives it to the level you want. and how you want. It adds things to your amp's sound that a nearly dimed high powered amp does. I've not tried it straight into a board, but that might work well too, but I don't think that is its best use.
Correct.I'm not sure I would call the Revival drive an "amp in a box." It has to be set to work with the amp you have, and then it overdrives it to the level you want. and how you want. It adds things to your amp's sound that a nearly dimed high powered amp does. I've not tried it straight into a board, but that might work well too, but I don't think that is its best use.
I barely understand how the bugger works, my descriptor inevitably follows the same incompetence.I'm not sure I would call the Revival drive an "amp in a box." It has to be set to work with the amp you have, and then it overdrives it to the level you want. and how you want. It adds things to your amp's sound that a nearly dimed high powered amp does. I've not tried it straight into a board, but that might work well too, but I don't think that is its best use.
You are not alone in not understanding what appears to be a complicated boxI barely understand how the bugger works, my descriptor inevitably follows the same incompetence.
At the very least I'm consistent.
It is definitely an 'amp in a box', just a different definition of what they are using here.I barely understand how the bugger works, my descriptor inevitably follows the same incompetence.
At the very least I'm consistent.