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I had a Flying V modded so I could kill way more highs than the standard setup, so I could run it into the JC and feed its bright-rear end chorus with a super dark neck pickup, and run the bridge elsewhere. With just the neck going, washy soundscape like you describe, plus phaser, delay, etc. I like pairing a JC with a Bassman. For me, that's the ultimate clean sound. Not familiar with the Joyo stuff, but I got pretty good results warming up my 77 with some Seymour Duncan tube overdrive thing set with minimal drive. Same deal, it was the last thing in the chain, as a preamp. Like you said, not a tube amp, but sure is workable. Also you can turn the warm preamp off and get the nice crisp JC back. Mine is the brown one. There's also a blues-oriented blue one. Uses some tiny tube you supposedly never have to replace. Mostly I don't use overdrives; either I'm getting the distortion from the amp, or I'm using a Distortion+ and a Fuzz Face/Rangemaster clone. In fact, Rangemaster or Dist+ into the JC distortion gives it a good edge. I'll never get rid of my JCs, and I think what I am saying here is go find yourself a Bassman, Super Reverb, or whatever, because a big fat Fender plus a nice crisp Roland is a really good sound, and what you're doing in the meantime is pretty close to what I settled on. But JCs love to be layered on top of 6L6s, and that's better than anything you're going to do by adding speakers to the 55.
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# ? Nov 10, 2015 07:24 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 08:46 |
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Gorgar posted:go find yourself a Bassman Your telling me buddy... One day. That setup with the two pickups out sounds pretty cool. I've heard good things about the Duncan Tube pedals. I think the main thing is throwing something that is a little more reactive right before the amp.
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# ? Nov 11, 2015 02:01 |
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I've been planning out a stereo amp rig for a while and finally got enough space to start building it out. Can't recommend it highly enough even if it screws up all my old EQ ideas because now I'm running two amps and I usually ran both singly with mid heavy tones so they're kinda fighting for EQ space until I get time to tweak them properly. WIP rats nest of cables. philkop posted:BIG SOUND! Get a used 115 bass combo or go full crazy with an Eden EM275 and run two stereo amps side by side with extra inputs for your students. If you really want to pair the Roland with a tube amp then have you looked into a lunchbox head and a 112/212 cab?
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# ? Nov 11, 2015 05:01 |
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Verizian posted:I've been planning out a stereo amp rig for a while and finally got enough space to start building it out. Can't recommend it highly enough even if it screws up all my old EQ ideas because now I'm running two amps and I usually ran both singly with mid heavy tones so they're kinda fighting for EQ space until I get time to tweak them properly. I really do need a bass amp since I fill in playing bass more than I ever play guitar out.
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# ? Nov 13, 2015 00:07 |
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philkop posted:I really do need a bass amp since I fill in playing bass more than I ever play guitar out. See, Bassman!
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# ? Nov 13, 2015 00:09 |
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Amp worship in the studio today, the engineer said he wanted some options for guitar overdubs, we came back from lunch to this in the live room. Orange stacks are ours. Guess I should list them, L to R : Jcm900 100watt reverb that sounded heavy 4x12 Marshall, Orange Dual Dark on top of an Orange 4x12 and a Worshiper 2x15 that our friends make. Vox AC 30 handwired with broken reverb on a 4x12, Orange Rockerverb 50 with 6x12s, a Roland Jazz Chorus 120, and some little Fender. Pokey Araya fucked around with this message at 09:24 on Nov 13, 2015 |
# ? Nov 13, 2015 09:21 |
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Gorgar posted:See, Bassman! Then I just need a Rickenbacker. Ughh E: I'm seriously happy with my short scale jaguar bass, but I feel like a Rick through a bassman would be the perfect punchy bass tone. philkop fucked around with this message at 16:41 on Nov 14, 2015 |
# ? Nov 14, 2015 16:38 |
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philkop posted:I feel like a Rick through a bassman would be the perfect punchy bass tone. It's pretty glorious. The silverfaces are pretty cheap still. They'll fart out at higher volume, but it's loud enough for practice or playing with acoustics or an electric band that knows about space and doesn't have to be loud. For loud volume, use a 6550 amp for the low end, and use the Rick-O-Sound stereo jack to run the Bassman on just the bridge pickup. Add effects, don't lose your low end, sound cool. Or, get a modern Bassman 100T, enjoy silent recording mode (post power tube!), and enough power to deal with a drummer. Two inputs, so you can still do the stereo thing. So, uh, yeah, I agree. Mostly the internet will tell you Bassmans are lousy bass amps, but there are ways to make it work, and gently caress, I love the sound of them. The old silverface ones are nice cheap workhorses. The new ones are less cheap, still workhorses.
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# ? Nov 14, 2015 18:20 |
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I have a Fender M-80 combo amplifier. It was assembled in Brea, CA, rather than the current Corona plant. It's the gray rat fur edition, with red knobs and I'm currently attempting to repair it, as after having it in my possession for nearly 10 years now it sounds fritzed. My older brother's best friend had given it to me when I started playing guitar, and he had the amp since he likely purchased it in the early 90s. I've never really compared notes on the amp, because all my friends had Behringer combos. I like that the M-80 is loud as hell, and hope the repairman can fix it, and isn't dead. He promised me $40 to repair it, which sounded like a deal as other guys in the area wanted $70/hr. Anybody ever have this amp at one point, or know anything special about it? I really don't know much about solid-state amplifiers, but recently I've loved the sound of the tube Fender Special Deluxe Reverb, and am considering tube amps in the future, but the M-80 is very loud as it is, and I'd figure saving up for a better guitar might be better, unless some have some other opinion of this amp, I'd like to read who else around here has dealt with them.
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# ? Nov 17, 2015 02:13 |
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I'll be getting in an Arturia Microbrute sometime soon. Will it be reasonably safe to use it with a Tone Hammer 500 -> GS112? Maybe at least turn the tweeter all the way off?
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# ? Nov 17, 2015 03:53 |
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Kilometers Davis posted:I'll be getting in an Arturia Microbrute sometime soon. Will it be reasonably safe to use it with a Tone Hammer 500 -> GS112? Maybe at least turn the tweeter all the way off? You should be fine, but as a general rule I would set the volume on the synth to zero and then slowly bring it up just in case, but I've had zero problem with plugging both my Minibrute and MS-20 mini into my DSL1C. Also, as someone that owns the Minibrute I will insist that you plug your guitar into the line in and set both a running filter LFO and/or use the brute factor since a synth with a line in is also a really big but amazingly fun guitar pedal. A Winner is Jew fucked around with this message at 00:48 on Nov 18, 2015 |
# ? Nov 18, 2015 00:42 |
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Pokey Araya posted:Amp worship in the studio today, the engineer said he wanted some options for guitar overdubs, we came back from lunch to this in the live room. Orange stacks are ours. Ahahaha, years ago I had that same type of little fender as probably my first real tube amp! I swapped the tubes out for sovteks and absolutely ripped the gently caress out of the tinny little speaker before I sold it and upgraded to something bigger and meaner. Looks like one hell of a jam session would be in order.
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# ? Nov 20, 2015 08:35 |
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Need some advice: I am looking for a head on the budget side of things with 3 channels (or 2 channels with an OCD to push some loving air) to be used for relatively small gigs. Think El Corazón (formerly Graceland) as the biggest place. The one I have in mind is the Carvin V3M. Has any of you guys used it? Does it give you the bang for your buck and all that jazz? I am open to any recommendations as long as you take the considerations above (and below). I used to employ a SLO-100 in the past for the type of music I'm going to be playing. However, that guy has increasingly become my go-to head for studio purposes and I kinda want to leave it there along with any other expensive / vintage heads or combos. If there's any other alternative that might come to mind, let me know. Take into account the following, as well:
Wark Say fucked around with this message at 05:18 on Nov 28, 2015 |
# ? Nov 28, 2015 05:15 |
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I hated the V3M along with every carvin amp I've tried. I'd recommend a jet city 20h. Its a great head period not just great "for the size" and also if you like soldanos its soldano designed. Only problem is its single channel. massive spider fucked around with this message at 17:12 on Nov 28, 2015 |
# ? Nov 28, 2015 17:09 |
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massive spider posted:I hated the V3M along with every carvin amp I've tried. So the 22H then?
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# ? Nov 28, 2015 17:51 |
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Oh yeah I forgot that exists. Also theres the small blackstar heads.
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# ? Nov 28, 2015 20:38 |
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Okay, change of plans, especially because now I can test the amps below (thank goodness the local store has them) as opposed to what was mentioned before:
I do appreciate that you guys answered back with recommendations, but on the other hand, I can play-test these babies tomorrow. Now, the last time I purchased a Mesa was around 14 or so years ago, which begs the question: They didn't start sucking all of a sudden and making lovely Rectos and such, right? I remember the other guitar dude from my previous band swears by his old Double Rectifier (and he did indeed sound badass), so if anyone has any experience with current Mesa products, let me know. Thanks in advance.
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# ? Dec 1, 2015 00:13 |
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So, I'm currently playing a 6505 that I got for fairly cheap and one of the bands I'm playing with currently has booked a spate of bar gigs for which it's completely inappropriate. Obviously, power and percieved loudness scale logarithmically and I know that a 15 watt amp is really not that much quieter than a 100, but what I'm looking for is a little more sensitivity with the volume control, so ultimately I'm trying to figure out whether I want a smaller amp or to invest in an attenuator. Since as far as I can tell, they're pretty similar investments, I was gonna ask for feedback from people here who have looked to scale down. What was your solution, and how happy are you with it?
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# ? Dec 5, 2015 21:52 |
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What style of music do you play?
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# ? Dec 5, 2015 21:54 |
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The band in question is a kind of low-fi indie rock group. I'm in another project that is a high gain/electronic/kids these days sort of deal, and I do some tracking for a friend who produces hip-hop, so I kinda jump around. I'm pretty happy with how my setup sounds right now, and power tube distortion isn't (right now) a vital part of my sound, (but it could be, and I guess a low wattage amp would be a good way to experiment with that). Like I said, what I'd really like is a bit more granularity with my volume control. At the last gig I found there was a really fine line between "not loud enough" and "too loud" for small rooms, or at least that particular space.
Octatonic fucked around with this message at 22:11 on Dec 5, 2015 |
# ? Dec 5, 2015 22:01 |
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An attenuator will get you past that awkward volume window. It will also let you get into power tube distortion if you want, but the easiest use of it is just to soak up some of the volume so that the amp is not at that weird too soft/too loud point. Low-wattage amps tend to use different tubes, and therefore will sound different if you push them into power tube distortion. I prefer an attenuated big amp with the sound and features I want to a small amp, but lots of people feel otherwise. I haven't used a 6505, but it's got 6L6s in it, so my guess is it's built more around preamp distortion than power tube distortion. I'd probably just get a Hot Plate (same ohms as your intended speaker cabinet), run it at -12 dB, and just let the power tubes breathe and operate more within their good range, and not worry about pushing them into distortion. It's what I do with 6L6 amps, anyway.
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# ? Dec 5, 2015 22:53 |
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That makes sense to me, thanks. I guess the GAS is loving with me a bit. When I look at spending $350-$500 on an Air Brake or Rock Crusher (I don't think THD is making hot plates anymore) when my brain goes, "oh, but you can get one of those shiny looking Hughes and Kettner heads for not that much more, and think of all the new options that would give you!" sometimes. I think you're right that an attenuator is what I'm really after here though. I like my amp, I'd just like a little less of it. Octatonic fucked around with this message at 00:23 on Dec 6, 2015 |
# ? Dec 5, 2015 23:53 |
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Looks like THD is still in business, but they just sell their stuff on Ebay. I have a couple. They do the job well enough, especially for the sort of milder attenuation you're looking for. I have a couple of the Rock Crusher Recording ones that I use on some 100W Engls. They put out a much better line out signal than the Hot Plates, and they seem to sound better at high rates of attenuation. In my opinion, it's a good enough sound that you could consider recording with it, or not bringing a speaker cabinet if you have a PA to run into. They also do just fine at mild amp-taming. I'm sure the non-recording version would do that just as well, though I'd really consider springing for the recording one.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 01:13 |
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You've been very helpful, thank you. It's nice to get talked in to something sometimes.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 01:32 |
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Also, and if you're okay with someone playing Devil's Advocate here, have you tried the 5150 series when Eddie left Peavey and went to Fender? They do offer a 50 watt version of the 5150 III. It's a pretty cool head that works pretty well both live and in the studio. No doubt having an attenuator will come in handy for a 120 watt head in future situations where you need it, but I think that sometimes having less stuff that you need to troubleshoot if anything at all goes wrong is better in the long run.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 02:29 |
For attenuators I recommend the Weber Mass line of attenuators. They seem to be a fair bit cheaper than the competition and sound really good. They use a speaker motor for the load so they react more naturally than resistor based loads.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 02:36 |
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Octatonic posted:
They make a lunchbox version which can be knocked down to 1W.
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# ? Dec 6, 2015 03:08 |
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Octatonic posted:That makes sense to me, thanks. I guess the GAS is loving with me a bit. When I look at spending $350-$500 on an Air Brake or Rock Crusher (I don't think THD is making hot plates anymore) when my brain goes, "oh, but you can get one of those shiny looking Hughes and Kettner heads for not that much more, and think of all the new options that would give you!" sometimes. I just bought a THD from their eBay account, and it works great... it lets me get away with playing my Orange Dual Terror in an apartment.
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 03:45 |
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Is there a good primer out there on the varieties in Ampeg SVT heads? Are the modern ones good still or should I be looking only at older models? Been playing a GK 800RB but I think it's time I move on up as I'm playing out more again.
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 03:49 |
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So to follow up, I ended up getting a 200w Mass with a balanced line out. If anyone's interested, I can do a write up when it gets built and shipped.
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 03:51 |
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hedgecore posted:Is there a good primer out there on the varieties in Ampeg SVT heads? Are the modern ones good still or should I be looking only at older models? Used SVT-CLs used to be the cheapest way to get a real SVT probably still are. No vintage mojo but still good amps. Though I can't imagine you'd need more than an 800rb as that's a pretty loud decent sounding amp imo unless by "moving up" you're referring to that SVT sound.
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# ? Dec 8, 2015 03:54 |
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FancyMike posted:Used SVT-CLs used to be the cheapest way to get a real SVT probably still are. No vintage mojo but still good amps. Though I can't imagine you'd need more than an 800rb as that's a pretty loud decent sounding amp imo unless by "moving up" you're referring to that SVT sound. Yeah I mean in tone (I mean better subjectively, not objectively). The 800RB gets very loud but even with a Sansamp I still prefer an actual SVT.
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# ? Dec 9, 2015 03:16 |
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Well again, SVT-CLs are around for under $1k, or something like https://reverb.com/item/1386767-ampeg-svt-2pro would get most of the way there on a decent budget. If you've got $1500-2k to blow then go ahead and look at vintage/VR models. Personally, I get more than enough volume and the Ampeg sound out of a V4, but that is admittedly without a ton of headroom left over and even those amps can be kind of pricey these days.
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# ? Dec 9, 2015 16:51 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFjGJAd_v9A I'm super hype about this *Its got normal and bright inputs, plus a "both" input for jumping them together, also inbuilt attenuation for maximum power tube distortion. * Fender claim its their take on a "british" sound * As everyone knows the first marshalls were made from modifying fender bassmans. * its a loving tiny, reasonably priced plexi. massive spider fucked around with this message at 20:09 on Dec 12, 2015 |
# ? Dec 12, 2015 15:05 |
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I've had a chance to try the 7 watt EL84 version (literally came to the store yesterday), it's a good sounding amp. The fact they are doing such a big range of 7, 15, 18/30 and 45 watts is crazy cool. Also it's literally as if a Fender Bassman and a Marshall Bluesbreaker had a baby.
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# ? Dec 12, 2015 19:34 |
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massive spider posted:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFjGJAd_v9A Holy poo poo that looks amazing. The 15 watt version looks interesting as well since it looks like you can mute it and silently record from it. e: It's also the only one with an effects loop. A Winner is Jew fucked around with this message at 01:36 on Dec 13, 2015 |
# ? Dec 13, 2015 01:21 |
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Sounds nice. I'd like to try one out.
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# ? Dec 13, 2015 01:31 |
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No fx loop That amp sounds awesome though. Like real awesome. I can't wait until some more demos come out.
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# ? Dec 13, 2015 01:35 |
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i still haven't hosed with actual fx loops much. i just put everything in front because i prefer simplicity. the only thing i really feel would benefit me putting it in the loop would be my volume pedal.
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# ? Dec 13, 2015 01:45 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 08:46 |
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Most of my pedals are reverbs and delays nowadays and those don't usually play well in front before gain. Gotta have a looper in the loop too so you can mess around tweaking rhythm/lead tones.
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# ? Dec 13, 2015 01:49 |