Support |
I have never personally used a Fireworx, but I've played with a guy that uses one, and I think it sounds great. I do own an Eclipse, though, and can't imagine playing without one at this point ... at least not until I raise the cash and move up to an H8000. The H8000FW is damn expensive, but if you figure in 8 times the processing power, anything-to-anything internal routing, custom algorithms, and built-in FW computer interface factors (at roughly double the price), it seems worth every penny. Tangent. Sorry about that. Back to the Eclipse: The sound quality is frankly amazing, and that's before we even get to the effects. Pristine audio quality. When I got it I used it strictly with clean guitar sounds to get a good idea of what the algorithms are doing. I thought it sounded just beautiful. I've run piezos, mics, and clean gtr signals straight into it and once you get the levels in the correct area, you couldn't ask for better. After the honeymoon phase the Eclipse went into the FX loop of a triaxis delivering a wide range of gain structures, and sounded pretty good, but the triaxis was so noisy that it hurt to hear all that noise multiplied by delay effects - and if you've got two effects available (even with each effects huge potential) you don't really want to burn one on a noise gate. Since then I've sold the triaxis, and found the variety of tones I desire (along with patch specific noise gate settings) in a Line 6 Vetta II. So currently my entire magnetic pu signal chain is guitar -> vetta II -> spdif fx loop -> eclipse. As far as algorithms go, there are definitely presets that will sound familiar. But if you take one of those presets and customize it, the variety of sound manipulation is quite large. That statement is more true with the non-traditional algorithms than it is with usual suspects. Jeff