Make and model
ENGL power "bull"
Description
Tutorial: Training a 96 kHz NAM Model in ToneZone3000 This guide will show you how to train a 96 kHz Neural Amp Modeler (NAM) model in ToneZone3000, even though the software typically operates at 48 kHz. The trick involves making ToneZone3000 think it's processing 48 kHz files while preserving the full 96 kHz fidelity. Steps: 1. Record and Save Your DI & Reamp Tracks at 96 kHz Record your DI (input) track at 96 kHz. Reamp the DI track through your amp and record the output at 96 kHz as well. 2. Open the Tracks in a DAW with a 96 kHz Project Use a DAW (Digital Audio Workstation) that supports 96 kHz sample rates. Import both your DI and reamp tracks into a 96 kHz session. 3. Change the Sample Rate to 48 kHz Without Converting the Audio In your DAW settings, change the project sample rate from 96 kHz to 48 kHz. Important: Do NOT resample the audio—just change the project rate. This will cause the DAW to play the 96 kHz files at half-speed, effectively making them twice as long. 4. Export the Slowed-Down 48 kHz Tracks Export both the DI and reamp tracks as 48 kHz WAV files. Since the DAW is misinterpreting the 96 kHz files as 48 kHz, the exported files will still contain 96 kHz data but will be read as 48 kHz by ToneZone3000. 5. Train the Model in ToneZone3000 Import the exported 48 kHz files into ToneZone3000. Train the model as usual (400 epochs recommended). 6. Modify the .NAM File to Restore 96 kHz Once the .nam file is created, open it in a text editor (such as Notepad++, VS Code, or any plain text editor). Locate the line containing "Sample rate" at the end of the file. Change "Sample rate" from 48000 Hz to 96000 Hz. Save the modified .nam file. Final Result: You now have a 96 kHz NAM model, even though it was trained in ToneZone3000 at 48 kHz! This trick allows you to bypass ToneZone3000’s 48 kHz limitation and train high-fidelity NAM models without losing quality. Enjoy!
License
Tone Hunt:The user may download and load the data file into software, and utilize or publish the outputs from said software resulting from use of the aforementioned data file without royalty or restriction. The user may not upload, or otherwise republish, or distribute the data file without express permission from the author of the aforementioned data file.
* NAM Online is an external 3rd party service/website not related with Tonehunt. For support, please visit their website at https://thenam.online