Omni mode should always be off, it causes more problems than it solves. In the Devices setup, add a Generic device and set it to whatever MIDI channel the amp is set to. Make sure the two are connected using a MIDI cable. Then, follow the programming process in the Triamp manual, you can assign a different channel to each preset on the GT.
Omni mode should always be off, it causes more problems than it solves. In the Devices setup, add a Generic device and set it to whatever MIDI channel the amp is set to. Make sure the two are connected using a MIDI cable. Then, follow the programming process in the Triamp manual, you can assign a different channel to each preset on the GT.
It's really the other way around - the Triamp isn't seeing the commands from the GT. In standard MIDI, the MIDI controller has no idea what's connected to it, it just sends messages without any indication if they're being received by anything.What I was I was trying to say in my previous post is that both my vh4 and the effect gizmo have their own feature to save a preset.Where as the tri amp’s manual say’s to press the midi learn bottom once then use my controller (g-22) to save a preset.But mainly I can’t get the g-22 to recognize the tri amp at all.
Programming TriAmp Mark 3 really couldn’t be any easier. If you want to save a configuration of channel, boost on/off, noise gate on/off, FX loop on/off and power amp tubes in a preset, simply activate the settings you want using the buttons on the amp, arm the amp by briefly pressing the MIDI Learn button (Learn will light up), and then press the appropriate switch on your MIDI board that you want to recall this configuration. The Learn light will switch off, which tells you that TriAmp Mark 3 has saved your settings to one of the 128 internal preset slots and assigned it to a program number on your MIDI board.
Now, when TriAmp Mark 3 receives a program change message via the selected MIDI channel (more on this below), Learn flashes briefly and TriAmp is configured accordingly.