Guitar pedals

The compact “direct rig” buyer’s guide: TONEX One vs mini modelers vs full-size floor units

A **direct rig** (guitar → modeler/amp sim → PA/FRFR/IR) is no longer a compromise in 2026. For many players it’s the most **consistent** solution for gigs, reh...

A direct rig (guitar → modeler/amp sim → PA/FRFR/IR) is no longer a compromise in 2026. For many players it’s the most consistent solution for gigs, rehearsals, fly dates, and content creation.

The real question isn’t “does it sound good?” (most things can). It’s:

  • how much you’re willing to prep at home vs manage on stage;
  • how much foot control you need;
  • how much you want to rely on an app/computer;
  • how scalable you want the rig to be.

This guide compares three families:

  1. TONEX One (micro amp-capture player)
  2. Mini modelers (compact units with FX and routing)
  3. Full-size floor units (stage workstations)

Useful Muviber searches:


1. Before you buy: 7 questions that prevent a bad choice

  1. How many sounds do you truly need per set? (3, 10, 40?)
  2. Do you need instant scene switching or just a few presets?
  3. Are you on in-ears or wedges/FRFR? Do you need stereo?
  4. Stable backline or constantly changing PAs?
  5. Do you need an effects loop for external pedals?
  6. Do you also need USB recording, reamp, headphone practice?
  7. Which pain do you prefer: programming (before) vs operating (during)?

Answer honestly and most of the decision is done.


2. The three categories (explained like you’re playing a gig)

A) TONEX One (micro amp-capture player)

What it is in practice

A tiny pedal designed to play Tone Models (captured amps/rigs) with a minimal live control philosophy.

Pros

  • very “amp-like” results with great models
  • ultra portable (and a serious backup option)
  • best with the “few great sounds” approach

Cons

  • limited foot control
  • workflow favors home prep (no display, management via app/desktop)

Best for

  • setlists covered by clean/crunch/lead
  • minimal rigs and emergency backups
  • direct players who want less gear, fewer failure points

B) Mini modelers (compact, with FX and routing)

What they are in practice

Small units combining amp/cab/IR, effects, presets and often snapshots/scenes (depending on the model) with a limited number of footswitches.

Pros

  • more flexibility (routing, FX, snapshots, MIDI in many cases)
  • more stage control than a micro pedal
  • a strong balance of portability and capability

Cons

  • small screens/menus: you need discipline live
  • if you need lots of scenes, you can hit the ceiling

Best for

  • serious gigging with a compact direct rig
  • players who jump between projects and setlists
  • integrating a couple of favorite external pedals

C) Full-size floor units (stage workstations)

What they are in practice

Large floor processors with advanced amp/cab/IR, deep FX, complex routing, powerful scenes/snapshots and pro I/O.

Pros

  • maximum live reliability: everything under your feet
  • scenes/snapshots for full tone changes without panic
  • pro I/O: loops, XLR, MIDI, flexible routing

Cons

  • bigger, heavier, longer setup
  • higher cost and the risk of buying “too much”

Best for

  • shows with frequent, precise tone changes
  • players who need a single all-in-one stage brain
  • rigs that require routing, MIDI sync, multiple outputs

3. Quick comparison table

Aspect TONEX One Mini modelers Full-size floor units
Portability Very high High Medium
Foot control Low Medium High
Routing/FX depth Essential Good Advanced
Pre-gig prep High Medium Medium
Live operation Easy if 3 tones Good Excellent
Scalability Limited Medium High
Best use minimal rig / backup compact full rig complex shows

4. Three player profiles (pick yours)

Profile 1 — “Three sounds and I’m done”

Typical pick: TONEX One.

Why: you value consistency and portability more than scenes and deep control.

Profile 2 — “Smart cover band”

Typical pick: mini modeler.

Why: you need flexibility and reliable switching without bringing a workstation.

Profile 3 — “Show with a control room”

Typical pick: full-size floor unit.

Why: stage time and precision matter more than weight.


5. Output and monitoring: the part that changes everything

Your direct rig is only as strong as its monitoring.

  • To PA: bring a reliable DI (or balanced outs), and confirm line vs mic level.
  • To FRFR: different speakers change feel dramatically—use global EQ instead of rewriting presets.
  • On in-ears: add a touch of ambience/room; super-dry IEM mixes make you play stiff.

6. The #1 mistake: “tone quality” vs “gig quality”

Gig quality is:

  • level matching at band volume
  • consistent EQ across presets
  • predictable transitions
  • foot control that never surprises you

A rig that’s 5% less “wow” but 50% more controllable usually wins.


7. Recommended minimal-pro setups

TONEX One (minimal)

Guitar → (optional OD) → TONEX One → DI → PA

Mini modeler (balanced)

Guitar → mini modeler → PA/FRFR

Full-size unit (show-ready)

Guitar → floor unit → XLR to PA + monitor/FRFR out


FAQ

Can TONEX One replace a mini modeler?

Yes—if your gig needs are simple and foot control demands are low. If you need scenes, routing and deeper control, a mini modeler is the better fit.

Is a full-size floor unit overkill for small gigs?

Not necessarily. If you have frequent tone changes and want zero stress, it can be the most rational choice. It’s only overkill if you use 20% of it.

Do you really need stereo?

Often not in PA. Stereo can add variables. For personal FRFR and in-ears it can be nice, but consistency comes first.

What makes a direct rig translate everywhere?

Global EQ, level matching, and a simple preset logic.


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