The “elitism” factor does rear its ugly head here on a regular basis. As you said, most here are probably pretty close to the name of the forum, “home recorders”. We also have interest in live work, as I expect most also play live from time to time.
The Variax is an electronic guitar, which is completely different from virtually every other guitar ever made. The best evaluative comments are generally going to come from owners who have actual extended experience with the unit. They can (much better) tell you how it works well and how it does not. They have real experience with the sounds and what it takes to get the most out of it.
One simple example. The Variax, as purchased, has a range of tones from different guitars. Consider the Strat and Les Paul sounds. Both sound pretty good and are useable tones. However they are hard to use live, as the output volume is somewhat different (which models the original instruments fairly closely). Since most of us have a single rig we use live, having output level drop considerably when changing guitar sounds creates problems. Most who have used the Variax live have probably experienced this issue.
The solution is the Line 6 Workbench software. It allows the owner to tweak the actual sounds in the Variax to suit their needs. I use a rack and
a FCB1010 floor controller with the volume up position set to a default rhythm volume. I use the WB software to tweak all the sounds so that each guitar preset produces the same volume level.
I should also mention that the WB software is pretty useful to tweak other aspects of the Variax sounds. You can change body styles, pickups, pickup placement, pickup angle, volume and tone tapers, pickup level and volume, pickup phasing, and overall preset volume. There are also controls for alternate tunings and settings for 12 string operation. If one plays with a Capo sometimes, a Variax can be tweaked to play in a different key with no capo. Things like dropped D tuning can also be programmed and does not require any live string tuning changes.
The most underrated feature of the Variax, for home recorders, is the lack of any noise. I record at home with a Fostex MR8. I used to use
my PRS Custom 24 for guitar work. On songs where the guitar started the song, I used to have to turn just right to avoid getting any pickup noise in the recording before the main parts queued in. Sure you can edit most of this out later, but the better the original track, the better the result.
The Variax is dead silent for all presets. It’s hard to realize how useful this is until you record with it, and then note – no noise…
One would correctly conclude that I like the Variax. I have owned one for some time now, and it’s the best guitar $ I ever spent. I use it both live (every weekend) and for home recording. I play at church as well as in a classic rock group, so the live venues vary considerably. My home recording is mostly doing music for live vocalists. I produce all the music and an associated CD. They play the CD and sing live. The Variax is a great tool for all these endeavors.
Ed