October 2024: Fractal Audio's VP4 Virtual Pedalboard has been added to the wiki.

Wah block

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Revision as of 15:17, 17 July 2018 by Yek (talk | contribs)
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EV-1 rear.png

Available on which Fractal Audio products

  • Axe-Fx III: 2 blocks
  • Axe-Fx II: 2 blocs
  • AX8: 1 block
  • FX8: 2 blocks

X/Y and channels

  • Axe-Fx III: 4 channels
  • Axe-Fx II: X/Y
  • AX8: X/Y
  • FX8: X/Y

List of modeled Wah pedals

  • FAS Standard – Equivalent to the “Bandpass” setting in earlier firmware.
  • Clyde – Based on an original Vox Clyde McCoy wah.
  • Cry Babe – Based on a Dunlop Cry Baby.
  • VX846 – Based on a Vox V846-HW handwired wah.
  • Color-Tone – Based on a Colorsound wah.
  • Funk – Modeled after the “Shaft” sound.
  • Mortal – Based on a Morley wah/volume pedal.
  • VX485 - Based on a Vox V845.

Pictures of the real pedals, by MDProd.

Recreate other wah pedals by copying frequency range settings from manufacturer's manuals.

Forum member Leon Todd clones Dunlop's Petrucci and Cantrell wah pedals.

Position of the Wah block

The Wah block is usually placed before the Amp block. Unless you want to sound like Tom Morello, in which case it should be placed after the Amp block.

Setting up a Wah pedal

More information about expression pedals.

Auto-engage

Like an optical wah pedal, you can engage the Wah block automatically when moving the expression pedal. This is especially handy when using a spring-loaded pedal. To accomplish this, set Auto-Engage in the Wah Control's modifier menu to either a speed-controlled or position-controlled setting.

If you want the Wah to be bypassed automatically at toe-down position (simulating a virtual toe switch), instead of heel-down, select a position-controlled setting and set OFF VAL in the modifier menu to 95%.

Parameters

Parameters table

Parameter Axe-Fx III Axe-Fx II AX8, FX8
Type yes yes yes
Wah Control yes yes yes
Control Taper yes yes yes
Resonance Q yes yes yes
Q Tracking yes yes yes
Minimum/Maximum Frequency yes yes yes
Drive yes yes yes
Inductor Bias / Coil Bias yes yes yes
FAT yes yes yes
Low Frequency Cut yes yes yes

Tracking

"Tracking controls how much the Q changes with the Control knob. The Q in a wah is not constant. The amount of Q change varies from brand-to-brand and model-to-model. It even varies between identical models due to component tolerances." source

FAT

"FAT is actually a mix control. It adds dry signal so you can't ever get 100% dry. At max FAT it's 50/50." source

Max Freq

Decreasing Max Freq helps to make a high gain wah tone cut better through the mix.

Coil Bias

Named "Inductor Bias" in the Axe-Fx III.

This allows the user to adjust the DC offset of the virtual inductor.

"Over time the inductors build up some slight permanent magnetism due to finite DC current through them. This causes asymmetric distortion." source

Output Level

When changing the Wah type, the level is also adjusted automatically because the output of the models has been matched to the original pedals (firmware Quantum 6 and later). source

"A typical wah has a gain of around 16 dB but it's a bandpass (sort of) response. If your amp is set clean then the output of the amp block will increase by 16 dB when the wah is engaged. Most amps have a response that rises with frequency response. So if the output of the amp block without the wah engaged was, say, 12 dB below full-scale at the high frequencies, it will be 4 dB over full-scale when the wah is engaged." source

Special effects

Seek Wah

The Seek Wah is a pedal by ZVEX based on a sequenced filter pattern. For an equivalent effect, assign the Sequencer internal controller to the Wah block's Control parameter. For a more pronounced effect, add a Formant filter, attached to the same controller.

Auto Wah

Read this: Filter block.

Fixed Wah

Simulate a fixed wah position (i.e. Money For Nothing by Dire Straits) by setting Control to a specific fixed value.

Slow filter

Attach the LFO internal controller to Control in the Wah block to create a slow evolving filter effect.

Troubleshooting

Engaging the Wah causes a thump

"The thump isn't the wah, it's the Input Impedance changing. If your preset is set to Auto for the Input Z, when you engage the wah the impedance switches. This causes a slight thump if you are playing since the load on your guitar changes. If you want to avoid this, turn Input Impedance to 1M OHM." source

"Set the Input-Z on the preset to 1M rather than Auto. The reason the Wah engages abruptly is because it switches the input impedance. Setting Input-Z to 1M overrides the impedance switch (and, frankly, sounds better IMO)." source

This doesn't apply to the AX8 because its input impedance is fixed at 1 MOhm (not adjustable).