User Manual

Table Of Contents
Instrument Input and Reamping 115
The level adjustments described in the following section are performed in the same way for both analog and digital
connections. There are four steps required to perform recording and reamping of your pure guitar signal:
Step one: DI output connections
To convert your instrument signal into a studio signal: enter the Output Section and find the Output Source page.
Choose Git Studio for the DIRECT OUTPUT/SEND 1 or for any other output that you want to use for recording.
The output you have chosen will now carry the pure instrument signal, with a hot studio level, this is the “DI signal. If
you want to record through S/PDIF, choose Git Studio for the S/PDIF OUTPUT.
The subsequent choices - “Git / Stack”, “Git / Mod…”, “Git / Master …” for the S/PDIF OUTPUT - have the same
application; additionally, they carry the amped signal on the right S/PDIF channel, while the left S/PDIF channel
delivers the pure instrument. This allows you to record both the pure and processed signal through S/PDIF -
however, only a mono version of the processed signal is available.
Connect the output to the respective input of your recording device and check the incoming signals there.
The choice “Git+Processing” for the analog outputs delivers a DI signal as well, but at the original instrument level,
lower than the studio level. Read more about Output Source selection in the chapter Output Sources in this manual.
Step two: DI output leveling
To adjust the DI output level, enter the Input Section and select the Clean Sens parameter. You might have used
this control already, as it is used to adapt the individual level of your guitar to the overall volume level of the Rigs and
PROFILEs as described in the chapter INPUT button. Adjust the Clean Sens parameter to a level where clean
sounds have the same perceived loudness as distorted sounds; in doing so, you will have adjusted the dynamics of
your instrument to match the digital headroom of the PROFILER perfectly. The output assigned to “Git Studio” is
perfectly leveled at the same time.
While the ability to adjust the level of the amp is a convenient feature, it becomes critical when recording the DI
signal, as it helps to keep the noise floor down. When you later reamp this signal with a high gain setting, the noise