I feed it into the baby face to C♪3 and at current use 2 basic signal chains. It covers the clean Taylor acoustic/electric sound as well as the Strat/Tele, ES 335 semi hollow body and Les Paul, all from the 5 position switch a single volume and a simple bass and treble control that can cover a TON of tones. I have a T5 hybrid Taylor that I use the most and it is set up to cover all the common Electric guitar and Acoustic Electric guitars in one instrument so it has body mounted piezos, a single coil lipstick bridge pickup and a humbucker style pickup on the neck pickup. I use Cantabile for processing my guitars. You just wanted to use the Electric Guitar Emoji … but I’ll join in. I plan to offer some racks and presets in the future, and I hope others will as well. I could talk all day about the many others, and their pros and cons, but will make the 1st post short, and let others talk. S-Gear, as old as it is, still has an impressive clean tone. Until recent months, the sims were “ok”, but now, I am impressed with Neural plugs. I own, very possibly, every amp sim vst made. They stay in tune very well, and have survived dancing drunks on stage. I mostly use these two because they are not extremely expensive, and are road tested for durability. The other Strat is a black Japanese built, with two single coils, and, from what I understand, is somewhat rare, as they were ony produced for one year, but is not really worth very much. One Strat is a Red Mexican built, with a single coil at the neck, and a Humbucker at the bridge. I have quite a collection of guitars, but usually gig with one of two Strats I aquired sometime ago. My output is through the Focusrite into a powered monitor. I normally plug into a Focusrite, which is connected via USB to my laptop. Your custom presets and tags are now available on both computers.I will start out by describing my setup. The default installation path of the ‘Sounds’ folder is: C:>Users>*username*>Documents>Native Instruments>Guitar Rig 5>Sounds Copy the GUITAR RIG 5 ‘Sounds’ folder containing your user presets to your second computer (via USB stick or external hard drive).On your second computer, place the folder ‘Guitar Rig 5’ in exact same location (C:>Users>*username*>AppData>Local>Native Instruments>Guitar Rig 5) so that the folder locations on both computers are identical.Note: In order to view the folder “AppData”, you need to make hidden folders visible. Copy the folder named ‘Guitar Rig 5’ located under the below path to a USB stick or external hard drive: C:>Users>*username*>AppData>Local>Native Instruments>Guitar Rig 5.If you have verified that the above criteria applies for both systems, follow the below steps to share a GUITAR RIG 5 database with different computers: Sharing a GUITAR RIG 5 Database with Different Computers Your computer’s user name is listed under: Control Panel>User Accounts and Family Safety>User Account In the below example the user name is ‘Support’. Both computers must have the EXACT same user name.
The name of the system drive must be identical on both machines (eg.Both computers must have the same operating system installed (eg.
Start Service Center or alternatively log into the Native Instruments Website and go to Support > Updates to update to the latest version of your software. GUITAR RIG 5.1.1) must be installed on both computers. Note: To access a GUITAR RIG 5 preset database with more than one computer, it is recommended to use the GUITAR RIG 5 default installation paths and folders.įirst, make sure your different systems fulfill the requirements listed below: GUITAR RIG 5 uses a tag-based preset browser to facilitate sound administration. Since GUITAR RIG 5 the preset database structure has changed.