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Help me pleaze

mr.crowley's picture

Hi, I would like to know if theres a way to delete all the patches that are already in the tlse when you buy it, ( default patches )

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mesm's picture

hey, i'm curious why you

hey, i'm curious why you want to delete all of them at once. Some are good reference points for creating new/better sounds. It seems like it doesn't matter if you delete them all at once because once you've written your new patch and put it where you want, the old one is gone.

Anyway, I don't know of a way, but I have only owned this for going on two weeks. Goodluck
mesm

mself61's picture

He's right Alister... there

He's right Alister... there is no way to Delete a patch completly.. the only thing you might do (for what reason boggles me too) is have a straight clean patch or a patch with everything "off and zero'ed" then copy it to all the patches... also you must do it on BOTH channels (A and B) but as mesm said... there are alot of good ones preloaded, so I would find the one that sounds best, copy and write it to the desired patch. What I do is listen to the patches at the "end" of the chain (ex.. 24-4 , 24-3...) and when I DONT like it I take one I like from the "beginning" of the chain (ex.. 1-1 , 1-2 ...) and put it where the one I didnt like was, then copy my favorite (or close to it) to the "beginning"
and do any settings I might want, like turn the volume up to 11 or whatever. smile

www.selfdistruction.com

RobC's picture

If you hook up your

If you hook up your ToneLabSe to a PC you can use the Sound Editor to select and delete the patches. I've just spent the last couple of hours testing & tweaking some of the patches I have installed (originals as well as downloads from here). For those I just don't like, I selected EDIT \ CLEAR then saved the empty patch. Essentially it just turns off all the settings and clears the name. You can also cut & paste patches too. The editor really makes it easy.
Hope this helps...
Rob

mself61's picture

"Essentially it just turns

"Essentially it just turns off all the settings and clears the name"
does this make it the same as a BYPASS sound ?.
www.selfdistruction.com

RobC's picture

I believe that's correct

I believe that's correct (I'm still learning this thing so take my comments with a pinch of salt smile). It may not be exactly like a true "Bypass" switch since the signal still travels thru the ToneLab. But, once all the FX are off you have your guitar signal going to your amp basically unprocessed.

mself61's picture

hummm gonna have to check

hummm gonna have to check into this closely... it may be a good reference point in volume leveling all the patches.

www.selfdistruction.com

jon cardiacs's picture

I base all my levels on the

I base all my levels on the 'bypass' level. It's a handy reference but as a bonus the piezo on my guitar is passive (should be active) and I just use the acoustic simulator as my preamp. Sounds great and the stock pickups added in to the mix give me tonal flexibility and depth. Also saves having to install batteries on my already modified way too much guitar!! - No amps or cabinet settings necessary.

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