New Music Gear Monday: EHX Effects Interface Stompbox Integrator

One of the ongoing challenges in modern studios is integrating guitar pedals into a DAW-based workflow without turning your signal chain into a science experiment. Pedals expect instrument level. Interfaces provide line level. Plug one straight into the other and you’re usually rewarded with distortion, noise, or a lifeless tone that sounds nothing like what you hear on the floor. That’s exactly the problem the Effects Interface from Electro-Harmonix is designed to solve.

Electro-Harmonix Effects Interface

What It Is

At its core, the Effects Interface is a dedicated re-amp and return box that lets you properly insert guitar pedals into your DAW signal path. It converts balanced line-level signals from your interface down to the correct instrument level for pedals, then brings the signal back up to line level on the return. In other words, it’s the missing link between your DAW and your stompboxes.

If you’ve ever tried to patch pedals into an insert send, you already know the pitfalls. Levels don’t match, impedance is wrong, and suddenly your favorite overdrive sounds thin and harsh. The Effects Interface takes care of all that under the hood so your pedals behave exactly as intended, only now they’re living comfortably inside a modern studio workflow.

3 Modes

The Effects Interface operates in 3 distinct modes: Hardware Plugin Mode, Pedalboard Mode, and Audio Interface Mode.

  • Audio Interface Mode uses the Effects Interface as a traditional 2-in/2-out USB audio interface.
  • Hardware Plugin Mode allows you to send tracks/signal from your DAW through your pedals (or other outboard gear) just like you were using a plugin.
  • Pedalboard Mode allows you to run your instrument into your DAW, through your plugins, and back out to your signal chain, effectively turning your plugins into a pedal.

It has both Left and Right input and output faders on the top of the box, as well as a headphone volume control (all the jacks are in the back), a traditional stompbox footswitch, and a button for Direct Monitoring as well.

It’s A Fit For Your Studio

As you can see, for most studios (especially those run by guitarists) this is a very practical piece of gear. Instead of buying plugin versions of effects you already have and love, you can use the real hardware and integrate it cleanly into your sessions. It’s also a great way to bring some analog personality into otherwise sterile digital tracks.

And yes, this is just as useful during mixing as it is during tracking. Being able to re-amp after the fact means you can experiment without committing too early.

The Bottom Line

This is one of those pieces of gear that isn’t flashy, but solves a very real problem in a very elegant way. If you’ve got a drawer or a pedalboard full of pedals and a DAW-centric studio, this little box can make both worlds play nicely together.

The Electro-Harmonix Effects Interface has an MSRP of $359, and yes, it works will all DAWs.

You can find out more here, or watch the video below for more details.