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Comments
Thank you, Emrah, and I'm keeping my fingers crossed!
OooooOooo, new stuff?! Very excited 😀
Hey everyone. Our Halloween Sale has started and everything is 25% off right now on AppStore until November 2nd, all plugins and bundles. Single licence all apple devices.
Hi @firatoz do stereo IR files actually work in NAM XT?
I'd love to use the first IR loader for a mono cab IR and the second IR loader for a stereo spring reverb IR. So in series, first cab IR goes into second reverb IR. Is that possible? Thank you!
Bumping cause I’m curious how this works too! (I always thought the dual IRs “blend” the signals instead of doing them in series, would love to know how it actually works under the hood) @ArteraDSP
I thought about my idea again and I guess it wouldn’t work as 1. the IR loaders would have to be in series (which they probably aren’t), 2. the IR loaders are probably only made for mono cab IRs and 3. there would have to be a mix knob for reverb IRs to make sense and blend in properly.
So I guess these 3 reasons make my idea impossible in NAM XT 😄
Would be very cool and compact though if it could work in the future!!
The IR loader in NAM XT operates in parallel. This means that when you load two IRs into the two available slots, both are processed at the same time. If the IRs aren’t panned, you’ll hear them blended together — similar to mixing two microphones on a real cabinet.
You can shape this blend by adjusting the level of each IR slot, or you can pan them for additional separation. Hard-panning both slots is also useful if you want to leave one side empty and run a direct signal to your guitar amp’s FX return, allowing you to use a real cab on stage while still sending an IR-processed signal to FOH.
For the use-case you described, using Slot 2 with a reverb-only IR in parallel with a cab IR in Slot 1 will not give you a proper dry/wet or “reverb after cab” behavior. Because the IR loader runs in parallel, Slot 2 always receives the same direct amp signal, just like Slot 1. A reverb-only IR in Slot 2 therefore produces a full-range, no-cab signal with reverb on it.
When the two slots are summed, you’re effectively mixing:
Slot 1: cab-processed tone
Slot 2: no-cab + reverb tone
Awesome, thanks for the deets! 👍
My favorite tool for guitar playing.
Thanks for your amazing work.
Flo