
I think of TONEX being particularly attractive to people who have access to particular gear that they like but either it's not in AmpliTube or, even if it is in AmpliTube. If you want to create a "snapshot" of a particular chain of gear or apply such a snapshot that you or someone else has created previously, then TONEX seems designed for that. IMO (and others may well correct me!), if you want to simulate being in a studio with access to a big pile of gear whose placement and parameters you can control, then AmpliTube seems designed for that. So they are different things, with different approaches that perhaps ostensibly solve different problems for different people. TONEX creates "snapshots" of a particular chain of physical gear and lets you reapply that "snapshot" to the signal.AmpliTube provides digital simulations of physical gear and, as such, seeks to let you control individual parameters of that gear with corresponding effects on the tone as much like as if you were using the real physical gear as possible.I think Peter_IK's description captures is pretty well, though I'd summarize it as: However TONEX can be used inside AmpliTube, as a sub-system of amps and pedals, again to have the best of both worlds.
#BEST REAMP BOX 2017 FULL#
with full editing down to the single gear), while TONEX is dedicated to simulates just amp, cabinets and certain type of pedals (distortions, overdrive, fuzz, EQ, boost) in each of their combinations.
#BEST REAMP BOX 2017 SERIAL#
The two products are also different because AmpliTube can simulate the entire set up used in guitar recording (multiple serial and parallel rigs combining amps, all type of stomp effects, post effects, cabinets and microphones, etc. Using them together gives of course the best of both worlds and a super-powerful amp-sim system.

So it's not that one technology is "better" than the other, it depends of what the final user's needs are: full editing and customization versus accuracy in getting a specific sound. While analog modeling simulates the behavior of the whole circuit of the amp - with all the knobs, switches, buttons and their interactions - AI machine modeling gives an ultra-realistic simulation of the rig with a specific knob settings. We are working to have a better explanation of "AmplITube 5 vs TONEX?" on our site but this is something posted on YouTube that people seem to feel explains it pretty well:ĪmpliTube and TONEX are two different products using different technologies: AmpliTube is made using analog modeling technology while TONEX uses a new technology called AI machine modeling ( ). And I'm really excited to profile my amps because none are in amplitube, but aside from that, how does this work? What's the difference between a profile and an amp model in amplitube? How is this better aside from adding our own stuff and accessing stuff not currently available otherwise? My big question now, and forgive me if this has been covered somewhere before, but I've never used a Kemper or any other profiling product before. Looks like most of the new, not currently in amplitube stuff is in the max version, as one would expect. Wish we could sort the 40 odd pages to find things easily, but I get the idea. I guess I should do it the other way around so I can use the coupon and save the jam points for the capture box purchase.Īnd wow, that's an insane list of sounds.


Squeezenor wrote:This is a big help, thanks. Thanks! squeezenor Posts: 47 Joined: Mon 7:34 pm Does that mean/imply we might see them available in amplitube down the line? I noticed there are lots of amps in the tonex list that aren't in amplitube.
#BEST REAMP BOX 2017 UPGRADE#
The only difference between tonex software versions is the amount of amps and pedals and presets included? They are all functionally identical? Do we pick the premium tone models or does each tier have specific ones included?įor us amplitube 5 Max owners, what's the best upgrade path here to maximize discounts, coupons, and use of the jam points we already have? Looks like I can apply the jam points to the hardware purchase and then (separate purchase) buy the max software for an extra $50 off ($200), but can these savings be further stacked? Could tonex Max be cheaper since I'd technically be a tonex se owner by that point? A tone x capture would be all I need to get started profiling my heads and combos, right? Now that's settled, so we may as well use this for all our tonex questions.
