I've spent years and plenty of cash chasing tone on a budget....there was the problem right there!!! Buying distortion pedals, multifx, modelling amps etc as they were cheaper than buying a valve. Had a nice tone from a PODXT and MG250DFX for a while...until playing in a band live and the audience went beyond one row...."turn it up they'd say", "I have" I'd answer. Nice tone, just died in the mix
Went valve a few years back (after selling my gran for cash). Got a JVM...now there's a story too. It's took around 3yrs for me to nail my rhythm tone...the answer was there all along, gain no more than half, OD 1 orange, don't scoop the mids (if only i'd listened earlier haha).
Just taken my PODXT out of the chain also. This was serving as tuner, MIDI controller and delay in the loop. Had some pedals but kept forgetting to buy batteries and couldn't be bothered hooking 'em all up everytime. Now solved with the purchase of a pedalboard, powersupply and tuner. Possibly the most boring purchase I have ever made heh heh...but fundamental to this setup methinks. I think the POD was colouring my lead tone a bit too so tonight, fingers crossed is the trial run!! After a low volume test at the weekend it all sounds promising
Here's the chain for the interested:
Diago Showman pedalboard + T Rex Fuel Supply Jr + JVM footswitch
epiphone SG with Seymour Duncan JB's - Morley Tremonti Wah - Korg Pitchblack Tuner - Boss NS2 - amp
Marshall Echohead in the loop - 75% wet - light delay to thicken the lead and clean.
The only thing I would desire to do now (if this all works out) would be to install Seymour Duncan Mayhem Distortions in my Ibanez SZ-520 for a slightly tighter tone in more palm-mutey tracks and use the Epi for looser sounding songs.
Then maybe I'll buy a new guitar..........cough, ahem....