Question about MF Chorus stereo mode
Posted: Wed May 27, 2015 5:21 pm
The MF Chorus has a wonderful stereo sound. My question regards whether or not to set the internal stereo switch to stereo permanently. For the following two signal chains (see attachments), are the resulting final signals theoretically identical?
1) Guitar line in to MF Chorus >> MF Chorus set to mono >> mono line out to "Delay Pedal B" mono input >> mono line out to amplifier
2) Guitar line in to MF Chorus >> MF Chorus set to stereo >> stereo out via TRS splitter >> TRS splitter L+R in to "Delay Pedal B" stereo L+R inputs >> "Delay Pedal B" mono line out to amplifier
* It is assumed "Delay Pedal B" is capable of automatically averaging the stereo L+R input signals to create the mono output signal
The question is: For a conventional live setup (single mono guitar amp), is there any advantage to remaining entirely mono (including the internal switch) as described in #1 versus the stereo-to-mono configuration described in #2?
In the stereo-to-mono signal chain of #2, am I losing any desirable chorusing artifacts that would otherwise be present in the conventional all-mono signal chain of #1?
They do sound virtually the same, but I'm curious to know for certain. I know the stereo-to-mono configuration of #2 probably gains a bit of noise, but that's not my concern. Is there any unique phasing in the stereo chorused signals being destroyed in the conversion to monaural that would cause it to be lower quality than a conventional all-monaural configuration?
My goal is to be able to go between a single amp and flip over to two amps for stereo without ever having to toggle the internal stereo switch.
1) Guitar line in to MF Chorus >> MF Chorus set to mono >> mono line out to "Delay Pedal B" mono input >> mono line out to amplifier
2) Guitar line in to MF Chorus >> MF Chorus set to stereo >> stereo out via TRS splitter >> TRS splitter L+R in to "Delay Pedal B" stereo L+R inputs >> "Delay Pedal B" mono line out to amplifier
* It is assumed "Delay Pedal B" is capable of automatically averaging the stereo L+R input signals to create the mono output signal
The question is: For a conventional live setup (single mono guitar amp), is there any advantage to remaining entirely mono (including the internal switch) as described in #1 versus the stereo-to-mono configuration described in #2?
In the stereo-to-mono signal chain of #2, am I losing any desirable chorusing artifacts that would otherwise be present in the conventional all-mono signal chain of #1?
They do sound virtually the same, but I'm curious to know for certain. I know the stereo-to-mono configuration of #2 probably gains a bit of noise, but that's not my concern. Is there any unique phasing in the stereo chorused signals being destroyed in the conversion to monaural that would cause it to be lower quality than a conventional all-monaural configuration?
My goal is to be able to go between a single amp and flip over to two amps for stereo without ever having to toggle the internal stereo switch.