EFFECTS
The GUITAR RIG 4 PRO software boasts a vast array of meticulously modeled stomp boxes and effects which can be combined in any order or quantity you desire. Two distortion components, three delay units, four equalizers? No problem! You will find just about everything you need to get the tone you’re after.
Every single effect unit has been completely overhauled to provide you with the best imaginable sound quality. What's more, nearly all of GUITAR RIG's components can now be switched to true stereo. Whether you’re playing with two guitars, creating spacey effects in virtual rooms or just processing a stereo signal from your sequencer, true stereo is what you need, and what you get with GUITAR RIG 4.
Delays and reverbs are the bread and butter of every guitarist's arsenal, which is why we took extra care to deliver the finest selection of virtual delays and reverbs available. Based on award winning NI algorithms, these units will go the distance on any setup.
Whether you want to warm up your sound with some spring reverb, or use complex tempo-synced delays, you’ll find your perfect treat in the Reverb and Delay Bank.
This section offers you a vast array of modulators that can be be inserted anywhere in your rig: tremolos, flangers, phasers, octavers, rotating effects, chorus and ensemble, ring modulation, a pitch pedal and much more.
The perfectly modeled effects provide a number of options for making your sound more dynamic - whether a pulsating tremolo or a swirling 70's style phaser, or even producing wild synthesizer sounds.
The Split Module allows you to create parallel (instead of serial) effects chains.
This means you can process the split the sound and process it with different effects and then mix the results back together at the end. Serial, parallel, and mixed serial/parallel combinations offer a practically limitless range of possibilities for combining effects, for a truly original sound. The Split Module can be inserted anywhere in the rack.
This device is similar to the Split Module - it splits the signal path into two.
However, in this case, you can set a dividing line ("crossover point") in the frequency response, and send lower frequencies to one split and higher frequencies to the other split. With the Split Module you can, for examle, create rich effect chains that only affect the high frequencies and mix with a more solid natural foundation of the sound.








