[ddots-l] Re: Fractal Audio Axe FX

  • From: Chris Smart <csmart8@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 01 Jan 2012 17:32:08 -0500

My reply is rather long.
See below.

At 03:59 PM 1/1/2012, you wrote:
List,

1. Does anyone have any experience with the Fractal Audio Axe FX guitar processor? If so, is it accessible?
Ok, first and foremost, The AXE-FX II, their newer model, is by far the most powerful amp and cabinet modeller and effects unit ever. Imagine utterly realistic amp modelling, cabinet impulses, lexicon quality reverbs, Evantide quality harmonizing, on and on and on. Nobody wants one of these more than I do! It's in a totally different league than Line6 or anything else, and you'll pay for it accordingly. It really is that good, and that far ahead of any competition. But, it is aimed at the pro market, not the weekend hobbyist type player where Line6 is more focused.

The Axe-fx it's vast, so you'd be memorizing pages and pages of data to operate the hardware unit. You can always download it's manual as a PDF and have a read. There are at least a few more hardware controls on the newer unit, compared to the older standard and ultra models.

A year or two ago, I lobbied Fractal Audio for months regarding making their software editor accesible to us, with no success. The last time I tried the PC version, it was completely inaccessible to Jaws, meaning the screen appeared utterly blank to a screen reader. I haven't tried it with Jaws 13's Convenient OCR feature, so that may be worth looking into. If you check that out, please get back to us on what you discover.

Because of the complexity and power of the unit, you really would want access to the computer application to control it, and to make use of the excellent presets available from other users. As far as I know this is just not possible for us at the moment.

Believe me, I wish it were otherwise. But, Fractal told me after much polite correspondence that they just could not accommodate me. And, given the price of the unit, how many blind folks are going to spend a couple grand on one?

I urge you to write them anyway though, since I think they need a little reminding that we exist. Also, they might have a few more employees compared to a couple of years ago, so who knows. You may get further than I did.

2. Does anyone have any experience with the Line6 HD500, and specifically with the HD500-Edit program?

I haven't used Line6 Edit since I had their POD xtLive pedalboard unit. But in those days, it was an application written in Java and mostly inaccessible. At the time, I used to use an older Line6 program, I believe called Gearbox, to load and save presets on the PC, as well as give feedback when knobs were turned on the unit. Setting Jaws to echo all screen activity at least gave me feedback when I was designing or editing presets on the hardware unit.

The amp modelling has improved in the newer HD series, and they just released an HD Pro model which might have higher quality guts, op amps, converters etc. What I've heard in demos sounds great, with the effects taken from their M9 and M13 effects units.

I'm sorry I can't be more help - I gave up on Line6 a couple of years ago, and got a Vox Tonelab LE. It's limited programmability and the lackluster effects got me to sell that, and now I have a Digitech RP1000. It's a pedalboard with amp modelling, effects, lexicon reverbs etc. and is at least more flexible than the Vox Tonelab units. It integrates well into an existing guitar amp and pedals setup as well.

A couple things to keep in mind about the Digitech unit are:
1. menus rap but you can learn the matrix involved in programming it.
2. the pc editor is fairly accessible, and could be made more so with some graphics labeling and maybe scripting. 3. The amp models are quite good, especially the marshalls, and the effects chain is quite flexible. The effects are high quality and the reverbs are Lexicon algorithms.

The Line6 HD series is newer than the Digitech though, and newer usually means better when it comes to amp modelling. What I would do is this: Get an HD500 from somewhere with a no questions asked return policy, such as Guitar Center if you're in the US, Long and McQuade in Canada, and just spend some serious time seeing what you can accomplish, and what is too difficult or stressful. If their PC editor is still inaccessible, give it a try with Jaws 13's OCR feature. That plus Hot Spot Clicker may allow you to render some of it accessible. How accessible meets your idea of useful and functional is your decision, and all our needs are different.

and again, please write Fractal Audio regarding the inaccessibility of the software editor for their products. They are much smaller than Line6 and other such companies, and pride themselves on responding to users quickly. If they'd adapt their software so it was more accessible, we'd be able to use the most powerful guitar processor on the plannet.

Chris

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