Modern noise gate setups: pre vs post (and why “tight” gates can ruin your feel)
A noise gate is one of those tools you don’t *hear*… until it’s set wrong. Modern rigs are more complex than ever: multiple gain stages on a pedalboard, high‑g...
A noise gate is one of those tools you don’t hear… until it’s set wrong.
Modern rigs are more complex than ever: multiple gain stages on a pedalboard, high‑gain amps with FX loops, direct rigs with IRs, plugins, modelers with multiple internal gates. A well‑placed gate makes your setup quiet and professional. An overly aggressive one makes you fight your instrument: choked sustain, unnatural mutes, dynamics that vanish.
This guide covers:
- the real‑world difference between pre and post gating;
- why dual‑stage gating (or a sidechain/loop gate) is often the best move;
- how to set threshold/release without killing dynamics;
- 5 quick tests to check if you’re choking your feel.
Useful Muviber searches to browse options:
1. Gate vs suppressor vs expander (quick clarity)
- Noise gate: closes when the signal drops below a threshold. It can be brutally effective.
- Noise suppressor: often marketing; usually a gate tuned for more “musical” behavior.
- Downward expander: turns down low‑level noise without slamming shut. Often the best choice when touch matters.
If you need dead‑silent stops in a high‑gain context, a proper gate is fine. If you need feel and dynamics, a softer gate or an expander often wins.
2. Pre gate: what it actually cleans (and when it makes sense)
What “pre” means
A pre gate sits before the main gain source:
- before a high‑gain distortion/drive;
- before the amp input (if your main gain is the preamp);
- at the modeler/plugin input.
What it’s great at
- Prevents noise from being amplified by gain and compression.
- Helps with single‑coil hum, interference, noisy buffers/cables.
- Tightens stops and mutes because it controls the noise floor while you’re not playing.
Common limitations
- If threshold is too high, the gate reacts to your playing: lost sustain, choked notes, volume‑knob weirdness.
- It won’t fix noise generated after it (preamp hiss, loop noise, post‑gain chain issues).
3. Post gate: where to place it, what it saves, and what it can ruin
What “post” means
A post gate sits after the main gain source:
- in an amp FX loop (after the preamp);
- after a preamp pedal / “amp‑style” distortion;
- in the post section of a modeler/plugin.
What it’s great at
- Cleans up hiss created by a noisy preamp or a heavily compressed gain chain.
- Can make a noisy loop workable.
The feel trap
- If placed after delay/reverb, it can chop tails and ambience.
- If set too tight, it can remove micro‑dynamics and sustain in an unnatural way.
Practical rule
A post gate should go before delay/reverb/ambience in most real rigs.
Produkte related
JHS Pedals
JHS Std Double Dragon - Pedale Octaver Per Chitarra e Basso SPEDITO GRATIS€199.00
Verkauft in:
Italy
Suhr Guitars
Suhr Brighton Treble Booster Pedale Per Chitarra Elettrica SPEDITO GRATIS€199.00
Verkauft in:
Italy
Tech 21
TECH 21 Hot-Rod Plexi Pedale Per Chitarra Elettrica SPEDITO GRATIS€159.00
Verkauft in:
Italy
Verkaufen Sie Ihr Instrument
Treten Sie der muviber.com-Community kostenlos bei
4. The most reliable modern approach: dual‑stage gating
Many modern high‑gain setups behave best with two stages:
- Pre gate: low threshold, prevents noise from entering the gain.
- Post gate: gentler than you think, cleans the final hiss.
If your gate has a loop/sidechain (where the detector listens to your dry input but the gate is applied later), it’s often the cleanest solution: natural tracking, strong noise reduction.
5. Real‑world wiring examples
5.1 High‑gain amp with FX loop (classic)
Guitar → (Pre gate) → boost/OD → amp input → FX Send → (Post gate) → modulation → delay → reverb → FX Return
5.2 Pedalboard‑based high gain
Guitar → (Pre gate) → boost/OD → distortion → (Post gate optional) → mod → delay → reverb → clean amp / FRFR
5.3 Modeler / plugins / direct rig
Input gate (soft) → drives/amp → post gate (light) → cab/IR → delay/reverb
The #1 mistake here is the “preset gate”: it sounds impressive solo, then it eats sustain in a band mix.
6. Why “tight” gates ruin your feel (and how to spot it)
A too‑tight gate usually comes from:
- threshold too high;
- release too short;
- the detector reacting too much to low‑frequency content (rumble, resonances, mutes).
Real symptoms
- Notes drop off like a switch mid‑sustain.
- Palm mutes feel “sampled”: tight but artificial.
- Vibrato/bends lose tail.
- Volume‑knob cleanup becomes binary: sound vs silence.
Fast fixes (highest impact first)
- Lower the threshold until long notes stop getting chopped.
- Lengthen release: a bit more noise beats dead feel.
- If available, use hysteresis or reduce depth/range (you don’t need -∞).
- Use sidechain/filtering to reduce low‑end triggering.
- Consider an expander when dynamics are the priority.
7. Starting settings that actually work
There are no universal numbers, but there is a reliable method.
“Noise floor + margin” method
- Play, then stop.
- Listen to the noise floor.
- Raise threshold until the noise clearly drops.
- Back off just enough so sustained notes don’t get truncated.
Practical ranges (indicative)
| Context | Attack | Release | Key note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tight metal riffing | fast | medium | threshold lower than you think |
| Dynamic rock/alt | medium | medium‑long | soft gate/expander often best |
| Lead sustain | fast | long | avoid aggressive post gating |
| Clean single‑coil | medium | medium | fix power/cables first |
8. 5 quick tests to avoid choking your rig
- Sustain test: hold a note + vibrato. If it dies in steps, release is too short or threshold too high.
- Mute test: alternate palm mutes and open strings. If it “pumps”, lengthen release or filter sidechain.
- Volume knob test: roll back volume to 50%. If you disappear, the gate is too aggressive.
- Delay tail test: play with delay, then stop. If the tail is cut, the gate is after the delay or set too high.
- Band‑mix test: play over a backing track. If you lose glue/dynamics, you’re gating more than necessary.
9. Before you blame the gate: 6 noise causes a gate can’t truly fix
A gate is a band‑aid. If the source is messy, you’ll still feel it.
Quick checklist:
- isolated, stable power (avoid daisy‑chaining on high gain);
- good patch cables and solid connectors;
- distance from transformers/lighting/noisy PSUs;
- sane gain staging (sometimes “too much gain” is just too much);
- FX loop level matching (send/return);
- pickups and shielding (single coils + bad venue wiring = classic).
Fix these and your gate can be softer — and your feel improves immediately.
FAQ
Should I use a gate or a suppressor?
Brand names vary. Choose based on controls (threshold/release), whether you have a loop/sidechain option, and how hard you need the gate to close.
Should the gate go in front or in the FX loop?
If the main noise comes from pickups/pedals before gain: front. If it comes from preamp/loop hiss: loop. For maximum silence: often both.
Why does my tone feel “smaller” with a gate on?
Usually threshold is too high and release too short — you lose sustain and micro‑dynamics, so the sound stops breathing.
Can I gate bass?
Yes, but be careful with low end: use longer release and, if possible, filter the detector to avoid pumping.
Articles Related