Effects....

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MacGyver77

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I have a Tascam DP02-CF. Unfortunately it has no built in effects, so I was wondering if I bough a Boss RV-5, could I (and if so) how would I run it through the recorder to use it on guitar and possibly vocals. I'm pretty new to the recording game and I dont have loads of money to spend on an expensive reverb so PLEASE HELP!!!!

Thanks!!!!
 
You can choose to use any effects unit you can afford - as long as the unit has an in and an out. With your Tascam - you likely have two options:

1. Use the effects send/retun - this allows you to take a "dry" sound already recorded on a "track" and send that sound to the effects unit and then return the processed sound to the recorder.

Most engineers prefer to track a dry sound and add effects (via send/return). The advantage to this method is that you can decide how much you want to effect the sound later in the recording process and you can adjust the processing as you go along). The disadvantage - if you only have one effects send/return - you have to alpply the same processing to whatever tracks you choose (you only have access to one effect)

2. Send the sound to an effects unit first and then send the processed sound to the recorder - this then records the sound....with effects (this is called tracking with effects) or "wet". This is the same as plugging a guitar into an effects unit and then plugging the effects unit into a guitar amp.

The advantage - you can assign a different effect to each track as you record (delay to guitar, revebr to vocals, etc). The disadvantage - once you've tracked (recorded) the sound with effects.....you're committed. If you later decide you don't like the effect......the only way to undo it, is to record the part over again.
 
TRY PC Audio Editors

I only have the sound card that came with my computer. (DELL inspiron 531s)
There is a way to get your tracks into the computer and stay in the digital realm. It takes a little doing but us poor folks find a way. This is how: first copy a click onto every track in the same spot so that the click is before the recording begins. This is so you can synchronize the tracks later. Then burn the tracks one at a time. Then "IMPORT" the burned tracks into a digital editing program one at a time and use the clicks to synchronize the tracks together. Try "Audacity" ...it's a free digital multitrack software that you can download online. You can highlight each track to add effects to just the desired track without affecting the other instruments (TRACKS). I know it sounds like a lot of fumbling around but if you don't have the cash like me. I've done it! and it does work.
 
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