Pod farm volume/output level is too low – Line 6 POD Farm UX1 User Manual

Page 146

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Line 6 POD Farm 1.01 – Troubleshooting

8•5

Why can’t I launch POD Farm in Standalone Operation?

POD Farm Standalone Operation

requires that a Line 6 POD Studio, TonePort or GuitarPort USB

audio interface is USB connected to your computer. Only these devices include the necessary audio

components necessary for the

ToneDirect Monitoring

and Mixer capabilities offered in POD Farm’s

Standalone mode. If you do have one of these Line 6 devices connected, then please see the

USB

Errors section

for possible causes.

As an alternative, all Line 6 USB interfaces, (all POD X3, PODxt, POD Studio, TonePort &

GuitarPort hardware) support the Line 6 GearBox software for Mac or Windows. If you own one of

these Line 6 devices, you can download the latest GearBox version for free on the

Line 6 Downloads

site

. GearBox can be run in Standalone operation and provide mixing, monitoring and Tone preset

editing capabilities for your device. If you are using POD Farm Plug-In, it is possible to run GearBox

in Standalone operation at the same time with your Line 6 hardware as well (but it recommended to

use GearBox version 3.7 or later).

The Line 6 device Audio Driver cannot be found by your computer when

connecting your Line 6 device, or on startup

When this happens, (assuming, of course, you didn’t forget to plug in the USB cable) it means that one

of the Line 6 device driver files may be missing or corrupted. Download the latest POD Farm installer

directly from the

Line 6 Software Downloads

page and run it to install POD Farm and the latest device

drivers. Any missing or corrupt files will be re-installed, leaving any Tones Presets that you’ve saved

in place.

p

Return to Troubleshooting List

POD Farm volume/output level is too low

If you’re not getting as much volume as you want from the POD Farm Tone you’ve chosen, you may

need to go through your signal chain - from instrument to POD Farm to hardware - and optimize your

levels at several different stages...

Guitar/Mic Volume - Make sure that the Volume knob on your guitar/bass is turned up. If you are

using a stomp box between your guitar and your Line 6 device, be sure its output level is turned up

as well. If plugging a Mic into the Mic in of your Line 6 hardware, adjust the Mic Gain knob to get a

sufficiently high signal. The only thing to be careful of here is that you shouldn’t turn up so loud that

you are now clipping the input of your Line 6 hardware. POD Studio UX1, UX2 and many other Line

6 devices offer meters and red CLIP light indicators on the front panel to warn you of this.

Amp Gain & Volume - Turn the Volume knob on the Amp Model that you’re using as high as you

can go without clipping. The Gain knob will of course add distortion as you turn it higher, which may

not be the sound you are after, but if the Gain knob is very low this will affect the overall output of

the Tone. So you may need to turn up the Amp Volume knob to compensate for low Gain settings.

Different Amp Models and settings of the Amp knobs will result in different perceived ranges for the

Volume knob. This is because of the very different amount of energy that the Tone includes at various

frequency ranges, and how the different distortion characters of the different amps are perceived as

volume by our ears and brains. Turning the mids way down with a heavily overdriven sound to get

a classic metal Tone, for instance, can result in a perceived lack of volume because all the midrange

portion of your guitar signal has been removed.

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