Breathe life into your guitar amp sims and cabinet impulse responses. Simply add IRDX Core after your guitar amp or IR loader plugin and discover the natural movement, the 3D sensation, the slightly jagged edges, and the unpredictability you could previously only obtain by recording an actual guitar cabinet at high volumes with a microphone.
THIS is NOT an IR loader
IRDX Core is a unique plugin. It does not load impulse responses but instead can be placed after any amp sim or IR loader to add natural sounding speaker dynamics. The kind you can only get by blasting a big speaker cabinet at incredibly high volume.
What’s wrong with Impulse responses?
- We love IRs here at Bogren Digital. Well-made IRs are vital to obtaining a great guitar amp sound on the computer.
- But all IRs have a significant limitation: they can only capture a static, linear image of the tone curve and resonances of the cabinet. Like a photograph, if you will.
- On the other hand, real-life guitar speakers are living, moving things that respond dynamically to the input signal being fed into them.
- Speakers are non-linear, and it’s those non-linearities that IRDX faithfully emulates and adds to your amp sim or IR loader.
How do I use IRDX Core?
- In any major DAW, launch the IRDX Core plugin on an insert slot that immediately follows an IR loader plugin or a guitar amp simulation that includes a model of a speaker cab.
- You can use IRDX Core to enhance any such plugin — except for the Bogren Digital ones! That’s because all our amp sim plugins already have the IRDX technology built into them, so there’s no need to add IRDX Core after those.
- Any other brand’s IR loader or guitar amp plugin will sound better if it’s followed by IRDX Core.
Input calibration
- In most cases, no adjustments are necessary in the IRDX Core plugin.
- If you want to ensure IRDX Core responds in the most natural way, you can use automatic input calibration that will listen to your guitar signal and ensure you get a healthy input level.
Pick a style
- IRDX Core comes with two distinct modes – “Normal” and “Intense”.
- “Normal” mode offers subtle, natural speaker movement, compression, and distortion.
- The “Intense” mode offers a slightly different flavor and makes these effects more noticeable. Have a listen and pick one that fits your music the best.
The IRDX difference
Like tape saturation, the IRDX effect may seem subtle at first. But going back and forth between enabling and bypassing it, here’s what you’ll notice:
- With IRDX Core disabled, every stroke on the guitar sounds similar, and the guitar seems somewhat two-dimensional and lifeless.
- With IRDX activated, differences between the individual strokes are more discernible, the sound wakes up, and you get all the changes over time that are so important to keep the listeners’ attention.
- Using IRDX Core in a mixing situation adds width, movement, and excitement to guitar tracks. It also helps guitars sit better with the other instruments.
- With IRDX Core activated, the guitar sound reacts more realistically to your playing when you play through an amp sim in real time.