Thanks Andy. :)
The noise is still there when the gate is open, but your playing usually covers it sufficiently.
And that, presumably, is why the quest for hum-cancelling "single-coils" continues.
I assume so :)
Personally, I don't like noise gates. I've got them all over my modellors etc, and I switch them off on every patch :lol:. It might be that I've never learnt to use them well enough, but they make a slight difference to the signal, especially the tail.
I have to use a noise gate when I'm recording vocals at my place, especially the lead, otherwise I get noise from outside, next-door, the missus, or the creaking floorboards, on the track. I have learnt to set a gate up for that without affecting the vocal. But I have to remember to switch it off if I then direct the mic at an acoustic guitar - I'd rather put up with the noise or redo the take than have the unnatural decay I get. That seems to be ok though, because noise seems to show up more on a lead vocal track and something
has to be done.
If the song has no drums though, sometimes the "silence" the noise gate produces when the signal drops can even show up on the lead vocal track. If it sounds too unnatural, I'll turn the gate off on the vocal as well and try to avoid or to incorporate the environmental background!
I've never got into noise gates for electric guitar, though, even though I'm a single coil user. And I'm not fussed about losing the noise anyway. When you're playing, it hardly shows. And if you're with other musicians, it's hardly noticable. And if there's a drummer in the mix as well, that covers an awful lot of what you think of as your "guitar tone" anyway - and the noise is included in that portion.
When I was starting out, playing in a bedsit or whatever, yes the noise coming out of a strat seems thunderous and you're a bit worried. But the minute you starting using it in band environment you forget all about it (I did anyway).
Have to say though, I've never had a desire to use a lot effects in front of an amp - so I've never had that "Jeez - what's that racket coming out of yourn ampleefier??!" from other band members in a rehearsal :lol: (I actually quite like the noise though, it's part of the whole "organic music thing" in my mind. Even on studio recordings - listen to Queen's "White Man" on Day At The Races, for example. When I first heard that in 1980 or so, I thought "well, if it's good enough for them, it's good enough for me").
I do have question though, came up while I was typing this waffle:
How does a noise gate in your signal chain tame the hi-gain of your amplifier itself? I'd always assumed that the gate was
before the amp when used like this - so it can't tame the noise from the amp itself (it can in a modellor or in the studio, because you can put the gate after the amp). Am I missing something? Can you put the gate in the FX loop to knock the noise off the preamp stage, is that it? I don't use these sorts of amps though, in all the ones I own, the hiss comes from the power amp, but I've never been allowed to use them that loud anyway, so it doesn't matter! :lol: