Display MoreJust another profiling tip you may find useful btw, is to pay attention to the audio level being fed to kemper.
I do not have recordings to show this, but have noticed it quite a few times. My gut feeling is if I proceed and record the differences that this will be verified. Maybe others have noticed the same too.
Feed a very strong signal to kemper, just before clipping, and you are more likely to get a profile that feels compressed, congested, raspier. We are talking about tone and these words are the ones I use to describe what I hear.
But then do the opposite: send the weakest signal possible to the kemper (while profiling is still possible). Some of the issue seems to go away then. Not totally, but it's better. I have found this to be the case when profiling a few amps, I believe, unless it's some kind of bias on my part.
Maybe I will do a test and record the difference, because if there is an important one, as I think there is/can be, it could be of help.
Cheerios
Yes, I have noticed this also when profiling. Signal volume going back to the Kemper does impact the profile results. I have never tried a weaker signal though. When staying right in the Kempers default volume zone, had better results for me.