Usuable for live work. It's REAL handy to have a volume and wah pedel side by side plus the ability to let your toes do the walking through programs/effects. The wah isn't as cool as a my Cry Baby or Budda but I travel with the floor board.
Well the actual feel of the Wah on the Line 6 FBV feels to me, very similar to a crybaby. I find it a bit easier to turn on and off but I still wish it was an electro-optical design like my bad horsie 2. All in all though it is nice having all the switches on one board the same distance apart. Makes things alot easier and reduces the "dancing" a bit.
I have both POD and V-Amp gear, and the wah sounds good in both for live use. I use a Behringer FCB1010 floor pedal, where one pedal is volume and the other wah.
I have both POD and V-Amp gear, and the wah sounds good in both for live use. I use a Behringer FCB1010 floor pedal, where one pedal is volume and the other wah.
I also have both (POD 2.0 and V-Amp2), and that's the floorboard I thought I'd get. I would like to know what you think of the wah sound in both of them. More Dunlop/Vox-like, more Morley-like, or can you get more than one type of sound with it? Also, Are the pedals spring-loaded? Do they return to full up when you take your foot off, or can you leave the pedal part of the way down?
That Epi's a Sorrento and it's on loan, but I'll probably be negotiating a purchase. Yeah, I got the shortboard, it's got one pedal that you can switch from wah to volume or you can add a second pedal.
tell whoever it belongs to that I definitely might be interested. I just saw that there making Epi 175s now. Like I needed another guitar that I think I've just gotta have. I already want their Broadway and Zephyr and Byrdland and Joe Pass..