Friday, 22 March 2024

Why I Just Bought a HELIX Effects pedal

Helix have built a suite of products around a microprocesser and two chunks of software: a bunch of algorithms that emulate various well-known pedals and amps; and a configuration management program for those algorithms. (My guess is that they developed a bunch of specialised software objects on the way to writing the configuration manager.)

The Helix Floor (£1,199) is the top-end version: amp sims, cab sims, mic sims, and effects out the wazoo. The Helix LT (£839) is a (slightly) lite version of the Floor. Both have USB outputs for recording into a DAW, and both have expression pedals.

The Helix Effects (£479) is a single-chip unit that provides the “only” the effects. To record via USB into your DAW, something like the iRig HD2 (£89) is needed. If you want an expression pedal, you’ll have to buy one for a minimum of around £69.(1)

All three use the same configuration management software, and the same set-up of knobs, dials, touch-screens and buttons. The Floor and the Effects have “scribble strips” above each button that show what effect is assigned to it. The LT doesn’t.

All three can have “jam track” output from a phone sent through the FX Loop Return and patched straight to the output, by-passing the effects. (This means we don’t have to buy a mixer.)

The Effects has no amp sims and is for playing through a guitar amplifier and speaker. The LT and Floor have amp sims, and are for venue PA’s, studio desks, recording into DAWs, FRFR speakers and studio monitors. Putting amp sims into an amplifier is regarded as downright perverse.

Who are these for? This is GuitarLand, where hobbyists have loadsamoney, and the pros are broke. Given the cost of separate pedals, power supplies, and making a pedalboard, it’s the hobbyists who buy pedals. (Also, there’s a learning curve associated with the Helix and other stuff, whereas pedals are pretty much plug-it-in-and-twiddle-the-knobs.) The pros go for these integrated units. Less cost, less fuss to transport, and easier to set up on arrival.

I’m a broke hobbyist - the worst of both worlds. I think the functionality provided by the Helix Effects + USB recording + expression pedal is the starting point. And I don’t need to buy them all at once. At the start, I will play it through the Katana on the Clean channel with no effects - except maybe for some channel EQ.

How much am I losing without the amp sims? There’s nothing magic about amp / cabinet / mic sims: they are another bunch of effects, in this case a way of getting the Fender / Marshall / Vox / Hi Watt / Orange / (enter manufacturer name here) clean / driven / distortion / (enter name of effect here) sound that comes from the amp itself.(2)

Using amp sims would mean replacing the Katana, and this is where the previous discussion comes in. “Upgrading” to a conventional valve amp is not a feasible route, for reasons of volume, and it’s still an amp in its own right, so all I’m really doing is swapping one “flavoured” amp for another. The current batch of FRFR amp combos are aimed at being loud, rather than at the home market. That leaves powered studio monitors. A pair of Kali IN-8 (in white, black looks awful) is around £650, and they have their supporters. (There are monitors for £2,000+ the pair, and more than that.) And studio monitors are good for listening to output from DAWs, should I get that far.

Of course, I could swap out the Katana for the monitors whether I use amp sims or not. If I’m happy with the clean / driven / distortion tone I’m getting from the effects (aka pedals) of the Helix Effects, do I really need amp sims? I think the only answer is to try it and see.


(1) All prices exclude cable, which the marketeers assume us to have lying around, since we’re all old hands at this.
(2) Allegedly. Don’t forget that since the mid-70’s, at concerts, we heard those amps through mics, mixing boards and PA speakers, and in many cases what’s on a recording bears only a slight resemblence to what was heard in the studio.

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