T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
674.1 | More Than I Need | AQUA::ROST | Lizard King or Bozo Dionysius? | Wed Jun 15 1988 16:07 | 11 |
|
I'm just a hack at the guitar but every modern amp I've ever used
(i.e. with overdrive capabilities) has more gain than I could ever
use.
Typically the noise gets to be too much or else the guitar is just
uncontrollable from feedback.
This even with guitars with weak pickups like my Silvertone.
|
674.2 | My 2c worth !! | PLDVAX::JACQUES | | Wed Jun 15 1988 16:24 | 18 |
| The market is indeed fully flooded with high-gain amplifiers.
As WJB indicated, many of the latest albums have the distortion
subdued a bit. This may be to enhance the high level of finesse
that people are developing these days (ie fingertapping). Finesse
and wild screaming distortion do not exactly go together too well.
The challenges that I see in the amplifier market are not simply
achieving higher gain (how much do you need?) but in developing
midi control, stereo capability (including stereo effect sends),
programmability (goes hand in hand with midi), and the ability
to build a transistor amp that actually rivals tubes for tone.
Of course, this is just my opinion.
Mark Jacques
|
674.3 | like Saran wrap | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Wed Jun 15 1988 20:06 | 9 |
| I don't care for the distortion coming out of any of the modern,
multi-stage pre-amp amps. Carlos Santana called it right, "like
Saran wrap on your teeth". The best sounding distortion (to me)
doesn't come from pre-amp overdrive or output tube overdrive or
transformer saturation or speakers flapping in the breeze; it comes
from a subtle combination of all these things, plus probably a few
more.
/rick
|
674.4 | Gain on 11 | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Greg House - CSC/CS | Wed Jun 15 1988 20:58 | 17 |
| I too am a hack, but I like some of the sounds available from the
new equipment. I think that by including such massive gain, they
make sure to have enough to suit just about anyones taste. You
don't have to turn it all the way up, just as much as you personally
like.
One thing I've seemed to notice, and I'm sure that someone will
correct me on this... As you increase the gain the overdrive gets
first ragged at one point and then seems to smooth out. I have
a little Arion headphone amp with a pot for overdrive saturation.
If I turn this back toward a minimum setting, it sounds rough, kind
of a "60s" sound, and if I crank it up the rough edges on the
distortion smooth out and it's a more uniform sound. Perhaps this
is what we're perceiving as 'less distortion' on some of the newer
recordings.
Greg
|
674.5 | I've done some homework on this ... | FSLENG::CAMUSO | localtime(time(t))->tm_wday >= 5 ? | Thu Jun 16 1988 08:36 | 53 |
|
Greg (.4) is gettting close to what's actually happening. A properly
designed guitar distortion unit should be able to provide a
"round-corner" distortion characteristic, at some point, in order
to achieve that smooth, clean sound Bill was talking about. Some
of the newer designs are probably accomplishing this as their output
devices become ever more saturated, especially if these output devices
are FETs. The best output characteristics are derived from
complementary output FETs. Linear CMOS technology has made this
possible and is probably being used in some of the newer designs.
Now a plug:
Back in the days of slide rules, I was an analog circuit designer and
spent some effort at developing a primitive (by today's standards)
guitar signal processor/conditioner. The design philosophy was
simple: lotsa gain, super low noise, "round corner" distortion
characteristic. I was able to achieve these ends to my satisfaction,
but, not being a marketing type, never sold the idea to anyone.
I was content to be able to get the sound I wanted and to make a
few more units as favors to close friends. The unit uses a super
low noise JFET front end with a linear CMOS buffer/driver. I believe
that it's still quieter than any analog guitar signal conditioner
I've heard yet.
Of course, sophisticated digital signal processing/conditioning is
much better, but, for most of us mere mortals, cost-prohibitive.
I figured the last thing the world needs is yet another distortion
box, and most players seemed perfectly content with what they had.
Furthermore, the idea of building hundreds of these things with
my bare hands was, to say the least, unappealing.
But the box is capable of delivering everything from super-clean
to super dirty, and, after a preliminary set-up of the knobs for
your guitar output levels, is completely controllable with the guitar's
volume knob.
I then got an idea for an all-FET amplifier, using the aforementioned
design as the input gain stage. If you think that there's still a
market for this sort of thing, and you can point me to someone
with the appropriate marketing savoir faire, I might take these
designs out of the filing cabinet. Otherwise, I haven't the foggiest
idea where to start.
- Tony -
|
674.6 | may be wrong, but | PLDVAX::JACQUES | | Thu Jun 16 1988 09:48 | 9 |
| re. .4 & .5
I think it's possible that the effect you are describing may only
apply to transistor amps. I don't think it works the same way with
tube amps. When you crank the gain all the way up on a tube amp,
it's "fuzz city".
Mark J.
|
674.7 | Who saturates first? | FSLENG::CAMUSO | localtime(time(t))->tm_wday >= 5 ? | Thu Jun 16 1988 12:34 | 11 |
|
Depends on whether the output transformer is saturating (fuzzy)
or the complementary output tubes (smooth and warm). On a lot of
amps, the plate bias for the tubes is high enough, and the gain
low enough, that the output transformer and/or speaker coil will
saturate first, making a muddy, fuzzy mess. Some transformer/speaker
combinations sound okay, though, when they saturate.
- Tony -
|
674.8 | Explanations? | MARKER::BUCKLEY | fast Paganini stuff can b a drag! | Thu Jun 16 1988 12:56 | 6 |
|
Van Halen (i thought) used a combo of massive transformer and tube
struation, piped thru power amps to the saturate the speakers.
He gets a great tone?!
wjb
|
674.9 | Techno-nerd Bulls#%t Follows .... | VENTUR::WOO | localtime(time(t))->tm_wday >= 5 ? | Thu Jun 16 1988 14:35 | 52 |
|
Don't exactly know what EVH uses for equipment or how he drives
it. I'm just speaking from a design perspective. A tube's gain
falls as it approaches saturation, taking the sharp, harsh corner
off the signal. When a transformer saturates in the primary, the
field in the secondary collapses, because there has been no flux
transition in the primary due to its saturated state. I believe
that this yields a differentiator effect where the tube saturation
yields an integrator effect.
The speaker coil acts as another differentiator and you'd have to
wade through a lot of E/M formulas and some spectral analysis to
predict what would happen. In fact, you'd probably be better off
to experiment and determine the right combination of how much
saturation goes where empirically. I'm sure that's what EVH did.
Cant picture him consulting the CRC or Geik and performing fourier
transforms on his GPX to model the whole mess.
Besides, A lot of a system's distortion characteristic comes from
which order harmonics are emphasized, making the whole thing more
difficult to predict without a thorough spectral study.
As I said in .7, speaker and transformer saturation could work
together to sound okay. Techno-nerds like myself, however, are
not as intuitive as guys like VH, and we have to do things
formulaically. FET transconductance functions are a lot easier
for me to understand and work with than those for tubes and
transformers, which are, to me, mechanical devices whose charac-
teristics can differ greatly from one to another, making them less
easy to predict and more frustrating for us techie-types. Give
VH a new amp and speaker combo and he'll probably be able to tweak
the thing right-on to get his sound in minutes. I'd be lost for
hours, without me li'l box. And I still wouldn't sound anywhere
near as good as VH. Most of his sound comes from the fingers.
Besides, I've forgotten alot of that heavy duty math capable of
predicting the performance of electro-mechanical devices. I need
something simpler.
Just do whatever sounds and feels good. Forget all this techno-buzz-
word bullshit. It doesn't amount to anything in the real world.
Ramblin' on ...
- Tony -
|
674.10 | VH's monster rig minus the Bradshaw stuff | MARKER::BUCKLEY | Yo, the MESSIAH by GFH Kicks total ass! | Thu Jun 16 1988 15:17 | 12 |
|
EVH uses two 100WT marshall STD amps. All the knows are turned to
10 (He plugs into the bright channel). He has a variac hooked up
to the output transformer and cranks the voltage up anywhere from
400 to 600 volts. He says this melts the tubes, and frequently has
to replace transformers. The output from the amps is then sent
into an HH stereo power amp which goes into two marshall cabs with
30wt speakers. (Rick B. can clarify any of this)
So, looks like clipping no matter where you look?!
BB
|
674.11 | but what about... | SRFSUP::MORRIS | The best laid plans never get laid | Thu Jun 16 1988 15:19 | 18 |
| re: back a few
Yeah, it seems to me that there is less distortion. Namely Joe
Satriani. How does he get that tone.
And EVH had a much better tone on the first 5/6 albums than on the
last 2 Van Hagar albums. I read where an engineer or sombody decided
that he needed to "update" his sound. Now it seems that his Marsall
stack sounds like every other Marshall stack, instead of the 'brown'
sound that he had earlier on.
And from reading all these, it seems to me that Transformers make
as much of a difference in amp sounds as tubes? Right??
And what a bout speakers? Like Dave Davies cutting holes in his
for that thrash sound in "all of the night"?
Anyway...
|
674.12 | 100 lb. violin tone | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Thu Jun 16 1988 16:20 | 10 |
| Ritchie Blackmore, back in the days of Deep Purple, had what I consider
the ultimate "violin" tone; there wasn't a trace of harshness in
it. He used a Strat through a modified Marshall Major. The
modification was to redirect one of the preamp stages to overdrive
the input to the other pre-amp stage; sounds like any of a dozen
modern multi-preamp designs, right? Yet I can't seem to get this
tone out of any of the newer amps; they all sound too fuzzy.
Any ideas?
/rick
|
674.13 | Comments on EVHs Set-Up | VENTUR::WOO | localtime(time(t))->tm_wday >= 5 ? | Thu Jun 16 1988 16:47 | 38 |
|
RE .10
Wow!! I wouldn't know where to start an analysis of that set-up.
The microphonics fed back through those devices susceptable to
mechanical pick-up must have a significant effect on the output.
600 V is plate voltage for 6L6-type devices, to the best of my know-
ledge, so varying the output signal peak-to-peak swing with a variac
from 400 to 600 V should be no big deal. What's melting-down his
amps is the duty cycle of the signal. It must spend most of its
time near the 600 V (saturation) level, which would definitely destroy
transformers and speaker coils that don't have fuses.
To achieve this, he HAS to have some kind of preamp/overdrive device,
or he's got pickups with massive output. I have to attribute his
good sound more to his guitar technique and touch than to his equip-
ment. I remember reading a while back that, when VH was starting
out as an opening act for Ted Nugent, Nugent was totally blown away
by Eddie's sound and asked to try his equipment. Guess what??
He still sounded like Ted Nugent and not like Eddie.
Have to agree with .11 about EVHs latest stuff. Sounds mega-lame.
I hope that his live act is still hot. Black & Blue is just about
the lamest tune they've ever done.
Out of the techno-rathole, it's true that the clean sustain sound
is making headway. For those interested in its genesis, listen
to some of the Allen Holdsworth stuff from the late 70's - early
80's. He was using that tone back then. Again, I think it was
more a function of technique than technology.
- Tony -
|
674.14 | Marshall Major, fire extinguisher not included | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Greg House - CSC/CS | Thu Jun 16 1988 17:07 | 16 |
| That sounds like the way Howard Dumble describes the distortion in his
amps. He says that there is a 'feedback' where part of the preamp
output is redirected back in as input. There is a knob to control the
amount redirected. He feels this gives a better distortion tone.
RE: .-2 Speakers definitely color the sound, some sound clean (ex:
JBL, EV) some have more of a 'warm' sound (ex: Celestion, Peavy
Black Shadow).
I have a Crate CR160 60wt solid state amp with a Celestion. I've
heard the same amp with the std speaker in it and the difference
was quite dramatic. My amp sounds pretty good (but I'm getting
a little sick of the tone, after 3.5 years with it), the other was
just average.
Greg
|
674.15 | Tube info sought | MARKER::BUCKLEY | Yo, the MESSIAH by GFH Kicks total ass! | Fri Jun 17 1988 00:05 | 6 |
|
I also read that Van Halen uses Sylvania 95 matched tubes.
Where's the 95 come from...what's that mean?
wjb looking for the brown sound!
|
674.16 | tidbit of info | ANGORA::JACQUES | | Fri Jun 17 1988 09:57 | 35 |
| This is a little off the subject, but I just picked up a late model
Fender "The Twin" amp slightly used. I found an interesting tidbit
of technical information in the owners manual (of all places). In
describing how the Balanced line out may be used to drive slave
amps they mention the following:
(reprinted without permission)
"One of the distinguishing characteristics between solid-state amps
and tube amps is that most solid-state amps are effectively constant-
voltage output for varying load impedance. Tube amps are a mixture
of constant-voltage and constant-current and actually approximate
constant-power output into a varying load impedance. This is impor-
tant since speakers present a load impedance that varies with
frequency. A tube amp actually puts more power into a speaker at
low end resonance and more noticeably at high frequencies than a
solid-state amp. This can be compensated for by equalizing the solid
state amp but in order to really duplicate the tube amp, the solid-state
amp must have much more headroom available ie; A 20 watt tube amp
driven into heavy clipping can actually put out signal levels
equivalent to a 180watt solid-state amp. This nine-to-one ratio
can get excessive when comparing to a 100watt tube amp and therefore
compromises must be made in selecting a solid-state equivelant"
This doesn't apply directly to the gain-distortion topic, but
I thought it was an interesting bit of info.
On a side note, I love the sound availiable from this new Twin.
This is the first high-gain amp that I have ever owned, and it is
a bit strange to have all that gain at my disposal. More later,
gotta go do some work.
Mark
|
674.17 | | VIDEO::BUSENBARK | | Fri Jun 17 1988 10:33 | 33 |
| Re.. Wjb,Tony and other interested parties...
If my memory serves me right what EVH does is he runs his Marshall
100 watts full blast and then uses a variable stepdown transformer to a resis-
tive load to a line level signal,which after his effects rack the signal goes
through a Hush into power amp's and multiple 4 12 cabs. Sylvania tubes are
probably tested at 95volts whether this is in reference to bias or grid volt-
age I don't know,however I would guess it isn't bias,he uses 6550 or 6ca7's in
his amps. He may also use a variac to control his line voltage (AC). Tom S
of Boston did this with his Marshalls to make sure he alway's had 120volts.
If you desire to get this "brownout sound" I suggest you try to
get ahold of one of the Amp Heaven guys in New York City as they would be
capable of modifying your 100 watt to get this kind of sound. Locally I
don't know of anyone doing this kind of work.(or would trust)
If you have an amp design I'd suggest you copyright it or whatever
you have to do to protect yourself as there are amp companies which would
be interested in buying your design just to make sure you don't become a
competitor and they may never produce it. If the design is quite good they
may produce it,I would insist on a royalty for each amp produced and a contract
stating your payment regardless of the market demand. This is done quite often
with other designs or inventions etc. HOWEVER I AM NOT A LAWYER ,and what I am
saying is just be careful. Lot's of people have lost alot by not controlling
there situations. The guy(Jennings?) who started Vox amp's lost control when
he signed a marketing aggreement with an american company(Thomas Organs?) and
Jim Marshall lost a lot of control when Rose-Morris had exclusive distributor
right's. Nowaday's people are more savy to these situations.
Good Luck,
Rick
|
674.18 | More raving !! | ANGORA::JACQUES | | Fri Jun 17 1988 11:12 | 30 |
|
Please allow me to rave a little more about my new Twin.
I also have an old Silver-faced twin, and am using the 2 amps
for a stereo setup along with my MidiverbII. The MidiverbII
does some neat things with the stereo field ie; panning, but
you need two amps or a stereo pa to use the stereo effect. I
had ideas of using pan pedals, etc to control my signal, but
have found a perfect way to accomplish stereo, with full control
at my fingertips. First I plug my guitar directly into the
channel switching inputs on the new Twin. I take the effect send
signal out through my effects, with the last effect being the
MidiverbII. I then take one output from the midiverbII (left) and
connect it into the effect return of the new Twin, and take the
other output of the midiverbII (right) and go into the silver faced
twin. By doing this I am getting a great stereo effects, plus I
am able to control things with the channel switching on the new
Twin. The high gain distortion sound comes through both amps
equally. The reverb from the new twin comes through both amps, the
levels controls on the new Twin effect both amps, even the standby
switch on the new Twin cuts the signal going to the other amp. So
far I haven't found one aspect of this configuration that I can
complain about, other than the fact that the two amps are heavy
and will be a pain to move around.
Enough raving for now. I am like a child with a new toy this week,
and my wife has to use a crowbar to pry me away from my equipment.
Mark Jacques
|
674.19 | A measure of gain | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | I know from just bein' around | Fri Jun 17 1988 12:04 | 38 |
|
One specification on gain I've seen was in a review of a HiWatt
amp. It would put out it's full 100 watts output with one mV of
input drive. Now, I've determined empirically (with a digital sampling
scope) that the output of an single, unloaded, Dimarzio PAF pickup
can reach into the *volt* range on a good strum. That means, the
output of the guitar can decay to 1 1000th of it's initial value,
with that amp still putting out full power. I suspect that the strings
are barely moving for 1 mV of pickup output....
I've found thru hacking tube amps, that gain must be the right
kind of gain, to get a good sound. Frequencies below a certain point
and above a certain point are pretty much useless for guitar sounds,
and need not have high gains. A properly balanced gain vs frequency
will produce a more controllable, usable effect than just all out
gain. It's silly to talk of one without regard to the other; they're
inextricably connected, like "volts and amps".
I've also found that the speaker loading has mucho to do with
the kind of resultant distortion. Try replacing your speaker with
an 8 ohm resistor, tap off that and drive another amp. A resistor
is a poor approxamation of a speaker, which, BTW, differentiates
a signal that's below it's resonance point and integrates all signals
above it's point of resonance. Not only does the speakers transfer
characteristics control what sounds it will reproduce, but they
also control what sounds your *tube* amp will make! This speaker
factor is less critical for transistor amps...
Some of the best sounding distortion, I think, comes from a little
"3 tube wonder" cranked all the way. 12AX7, 30C5, 50W4 single ended
output. Has the "violin" tone, meaning lots of second harmonics,
as the "sawtooth" waveshape of a violin tone is comprised of only
even ordered harmonics. (Those get cancelled in push pull output
stages, I believe) 2.5W into a good speaker, and it's good enough to
jam with a drummer in the same room. Jam with him - NOT blow him away.
Joe Jas
|
674.20 | The down side | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Yo! | Mon Jun 20 1988 11:04 | 34 |
| The "new" Eddie Van Halen sounds (which some folks have mentioned that
they don't like) is partially achieved through stereo harmonization.
He uses a single Marshall head to get the basic tone, runs it through
some switchable effects and then splits the signal at a harmonizer.
My recollection is that the harmonizer is on pretty much full-time.
As Mark has discovered, you can create a wide variety of awesome
sounds using digital effects and discreet stereo. I was in the
same state of euphoria that Mark is in now.
There is a down side however. My observation is that when you're
mic'ing the guitar to play through a PA, or to record to a single
track, you should probably sacrifice the stereo stuff, EVEN just
for stage monitoring.
Reason: the mixed sound that goes to the tape or the PA is vastly
different from what you hear standing in front of the two amps.
I have seen an extraordinarily RICH sound get turned into a very
poor sick thin sound when mic'ed and this ALWAYS seems to happen
no matter what you do. One potential explanation is that the richer
the stereo effect is to your two ears (which are independent mics),
the more cancellation effects you get with a single mic, or when the
two stereo signals get mixed.
In any case, it has certainly been my observation that there is
a dichotomy between what you hear and what goes to the PA. That
is, you sacrifice house sound for monitor sound. I use stereo
to jam (and I would when there's no PA at a gig), but I would no longer
use stereo effects at gigs with a PA.
db
|
674.21 | Eddie goes stereo | MARKER::BUCKLEY | Yo, the MESSIAH by GFH Kicks total ass! | Mon Jun 20 1988 11:12 | 7 |
|
Re: -1
FYI, EVH plugs into 2 Marshall heads these days. His set up is
in stereo...just like Vai's.
wjb
|
674.22 | Need a new pedal for BOOST | ICS::BUCKLEY | Ya know Jane, it's always something! | Wed Dec 26 1990 13:36 | 17 |
| Well, after 6+ years of a fond love affair, my (trusty) Boss GE-7
graphic eq pedal got the trash can burial this weekend. I used to
like the fact that it altered my amps tone...now that I'm using more
tone from the amp, what I'm looking for is just more of the amps
natural tone, only MORE! So, I trashed the eq pedal, and am looking
for something new. Question:
Q: WHAT WILL GIVE ME THE MARSHALL SOUND, WITH SLIGHTY MORE GAIN THAN MY
RHYTHM TONE, WITHOUT DESTORYING MY AMPS NATURAL TONE?
I've tried The RAT...I hate it...too much coloration IMHO. Going to
try and look into the Boss line. I see some players (like DiMartini,
Jake E Lee use the Boss Overdrive pedal with their Marshalls) using
them...
Anyone out there with any suggestions?!?!?
B.
|
674.23 | | FREEBE::REAUME | Crunch Factory LTD | Wed Dec 26 1990 13:54 | 14 |
| I'm probably not the best person to be answering this, but there
aren't many of us working this week, so I'll shoot back.
The other guitar player I'm working with uses a Rat distortion
pedal and it works for him, but he's using a weird set-up. When
I first saw it I thought there's no way that is gonna sound any
good. I was wrong. The guy actually uses a Peavey XR-400 P.A. head
for his guitar! His effects run into the effects loops and the speakers
are a 4X12 and two 2X10's. Even though this is a strange set-up,
he gets a good tone out of it. I just wish he'd win the lottery!
I would check into the Boss distortion pedals though. They are
among the most rugged. Even though I still prefer the "rack approach",
I would plug into the Boss Super Distortion and let 'er rip!
-B()()M-
|
674.24 | This works for me. | LEDS::BURATI | | Wed Dec 26 1990 15:04 | 32 |
| re: .22
Well, y'all may think I'm out in left field but here goes...
When I use to play out I used an Ibanez Tube Screamer with my Strat and (old)
Marshall 50 head. I was rarely ever content with the overdrive sound, which I
would pass off as something inherent in the sound of my Stratocaster (which is a
stock '65). After going into "retirement", I decided to get a little practice
amp. I ended up with a Fender Sidekick 25 Reverb which sounds OK at best.
Actually it sounds pretty lame. It sounds like a practice amp. It has one
channel, volume, gain, treble, middle, bass, presence and master volume and
(boingy) reverb control, preamp out, pwr amp in, headphones out and a 10"
speaker.
Then I discovered that when I patched the preamp out into the frontend of my
Marshall...WHOA BABY! The preamp in that Sidekick makes a GREAT frontend. My
Marshall still sounds like itself. But I can get a ton of tones out of this
simple setup. First thing I did was get rid of the Tube Screamer. If you try
this, play with the middle controls on both amps. Great clean tones, dirty
Memphis R&B sounds like Ry Cooder uses, all the way to screaming ZZ Top and real
noodling sounds the sort Tom Shulz (?) tried to can. There ain't nothin' wrong
with the preamp section in this rig.
I suggest that you try something like this out. I don't know if other similar
units will produce these kind of results. I haven't had the opportunity to try
out Chandler type products. This was really an accident. It is a bit clumsy in
terms of physical set-up. If you need to radically change your sound quickly, it
may not be appropriate. But for me, THIS WORKS!
--rjb
BTW this works well with my old Fender amps too.
|
674.25 | | CSC32::H_SO | Redline? What redline? | Wed Dec 26 1990 17:12 | 6 |
|
Greggie poo Housey was experimenting with Chandler tube
driver(rackmount) and Boss distortion(3 channel pedal). I
thought they both sounded pretty good.
J.
|
674.26 | Da Tube Screema's Fer me | NEMAIL::PAGEB | Inventor Of The Chia Pet Toup� | Thu Dec 27 1990 09:49 | 29 |
|
To each his own, but...
For my money, the best "stomp box" distortion pedal is the Ibanez
"Tube Screamer". Though it doesn't give the total, all-out fuzz that
many of the other pedals put out, it sounds the most natural out of all
the pedals I've heard.
I do alot of switching between clean sound & distorted sound within
each song (i.e.: clean for rhythm, distorted for lead), and one thing I
can't stand is having a nice clean sound, then stomping on a pedal and
getting a completely diffenent tone... distortion pedals in particular
seem to produce a very tinny, chinsy sound. that's why I like the "Tube
Screamer" so much-- you can't tell where the clean sound ends & the
distorted sound begins (other than the "crunch" of the distortion
itself, of course).
Also, the "Tube Screamer" seems to give the lightest "touch" of
distortion; whereas most other distortion boxes can give all-out
screamin' distortion & not much else, the "Tube Screamer" doesn't
turn out quite as much fuzz but it can do a nice, subtle tube-like
distortion-- it's the only pedal I've heard that can do just a smidge
of distortion.
Brad Page
|
674.27 | Variation is the name of the game | CSC32::MOLLER | Give me Portability, not excuses | Thu Dec 27 1990 12:42 | 27 |
| I find that need to use 2 different distortion boxes seperately or
together (along with a compression box) and I'm thinking of
adding a 3rd box. Why? Because I need a rythem distortion (soft
distortion, without a harsh tone) as well as a nasty distortion
that is exceptionally bright for solos. I find that I also need
something in between (I'll probably build my own). Currently,
when I use both at the same time, I get a very complex distortion
that does not work well for chords (but either by box itself is
usable for chords) & if I add compression I get a different sound
(but a lot more noise). Variations in the tonal quality are what
I'm looking for & a single distortion box is limited to what it's
current knob settings are, so I like to mix and match as needed.
I played around with rack mount effects for guitar & they just
were not tweekable enough during a performance. I use a lot of
MIDI gear & found that I couldn't sequence in the guitar effects
changes the way that I would work my foot pedals (besides, I like
to try random things).`
I currently have 2 distortion boxes, a compressor, flanger, phase
shifter, octavator and an analog delay/echo box in my pedal board.
This all is a part of my microphone stand (uses Ultimate Keyboard
Stand Parts to hold: Microphone & gooseneck, Drum machine, Lighted
paper shelf - for words/song list/seqencer disk list and 2 brackets
for small powered monitors).
Jens
|
674.28 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | It's VI-ing my patience! | Thu Dec 27 1990 13:26 | 4 |
| I always thought the kitty hawk preamps were about the best "stomp box"
distortions I ever found....:-)
dbii
|
674.29 | | FREEBE::REAUME | Crunch Factory LTD | Thu Dec 27 1990 15:30 | 9 |
|
re: -.1
......yeah , what dbii said! Gain w/complete control!!
-B()()M-
|
674.30 | FWIW | UPWARD::HEISER | hell is for wimps | Thu Dec 27 1990 19:32 | 5 |
| I'd bet there are a lot more big name players using Ibanez Tube
Screamers than Boss Overdrive pedals. I know Satch and Eric Johnson
use them.
Mike
|
674.31 | I want one TOO! | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Join the Brotherhood of Tone | Tue Jan 01 1991 14:39 | 50 |
| I know *exactly* what you're looking for Buck, 'cause I'm looking for
the same thing! I don't want a distortion sound, just a boost.
I've been trying some things like the Boss Turbo Distortion as well,
but not for this, for it's own sound to replace, not augment the
distortion sound of my amp(s). This works ok, but it's kind of a pain
to set up.
Here's a couple of things that I tried that seemed to work reasonably
well for me.
Chandler Tube Driver set up for just a little overdrive and a level
boost. Worked pretty well, but the compression from the Kitty's lead
channel required that I give it a massive boost in the tube driver to
hear much difference.
Stomp box EQ in the effects loop (of a GK, but I think it'll work for
any amp). Believe it or not, this worked the absolute best of any of
the combinations I tried to get just a volume boost without a large
change in tone. If I stuck it before the preamp it didn't make much
difference, just a little change in the tone (which helped it cut
through better). It didn't have enough boost to make much difference
in the output level there and it was *really* noisy, but when I stuck
it in the efx loop, it was a lot more quiet and it gave a nice level
boost without changing the tone very much (regardless of how I set the
EQ it seemed at the time).
Fish the Boss EQ outta the trash and try it in your efx loop (just push
all the levels up a little) and see what you think. I'm going to try
it too, I'd kind of forgotten about this because I decided I didn't
like the tone of the GK that much so moved on to other combinations of
equipment (in the quest for the ultimate tone).
Here's another idea, some companies make stomp box preamps that might
work for this. I think they're primarily intended for use with
acoustic-electric guitars that don't put out a good strong signal, so
they shouldn't color your tone much. DOD makes one called an FET
preamp. Seems like something like this might be worth trying if you
want a stronger unaltered signal hitting your preamp.
BTW Buck, I thought the footswitchable master volumes in the JCM900
was doing this for you?
Buck, PLEASE let me know what you end up trying and how it works,
because I'm going through the same trial and error process right now
myself. I know what kind of a tone you like and our tastes are pretty
similar, so if you find something that works for ya, it would
definately be worth my time to try it too.
Greg
|
674.32 | More Marshall Madness! | ICS::BUCKLEY | Ya know Jane, it's always something! | Tue Jan 01 1991 22:40 | 14 |
| Got a gig this Thursday and Friday...going to be running a Marshall rig
like this:
50wt JCM 900 --> power amp in of 100wt JCM 800
| | |
4x12 4x12 4x12
25wts 65wts 70wts
I'll be using the footswitchable MVs on the JCM 900 for volume boosts,
and I'll be using the 100 JCM 800 for extra fill. I think I'll borrow
a BOSS pedal or an MXR Micro Amp for a boost thing. Hey Rick C., wanna
sell me my Micro Amp back?!? ;^)
Buc
|
674.33 | Who'll offer me 2c for this? | IOSG::CREASY | Smile out loud | Thu Jan 03 1991 13:08 | 12 |
| I use a stomp box preamp for solos - it really just acts as a volume
boost rather than modifying the tone or distortion characteristics
much. However, if you've got already got a balls-to-the-wall distortion
sound on the amp, then it doesn't do much of anything, because you're
obviously already driving the input stage pretty hard.
Also, Buck, since you're using a Marshall, you might want to check out
the Guv'nor footpedal. Apparently it's got a valve (oh, alright, tube!)
in it, so it presumably provides some coloration to the sound. I've
never tried one, but it's had good reviews over here.
Nick
|
674.34 | 9V + Tubes? | FSTVAX::GALLO | Spontaneous Harmony Singing | Thu Jan 03 1991 15:04 | 9 |
|
re: .-1
I pretty sure the Guv'ner doesn't have tubes. It's powered by
a (?) 9V battery, so I couldn't be tubes, could it?
-T
|
674.35 | Or You Could Patch In Another Guv'nor.... | AQUA::ROST | Dickie Peterson Wannabe | Thu Jan 03 1991 15:49 | 4 |
| No tubes in a Guv'nor, but it has an FX loop...just the place to patch
in yer rack 8^) 8^) 8^) 8^)
Brian
|
674.36 | | DECWIN::KMCDONOUGH | Set Kids/Nosick | Thu Jan 03 1991 17:36 | 27 |
|
I know that it's not everyone's cup of tea, but the onboard preamp in
my guitar excels at giving more of the amp's natural tone, without
adding any coloration to the guitar sound or the amp.
Imagine that instead of stopping at position 10 on the volume knob,
your guitar could keep giving out a hotter signal all the way to 20 if
you kept cranking it. Maybe even all the way to 30.
I get 9 months out of the battery, and when the battery goes I just
shut off the preamp and resort to straight guitar signal.
And talk about gain! My guitar will drive headphones! (Well, it's not
high-fidelity, but it works. 8-))
My guitar tech made and installed my preamp for $60. (I'm quite sure
there was a good profit in it for him at that.) It's mounted to the
bottom of a push/pull tone control and the battery fits in the control
cavity.
I've been raving (ranting?) about onboard guitar preamps for years.
It's a mystery to me why they aren't more popular!
Kevin
|
674.37 | EMG preamp? | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Join the Brotherhood of Tone | Thu Jan 03 1991 18:32 | 10 |
| My EMG setup in my Strat seems to have an onboard preamp which I
haven't seen with other EMG pickup configurations. It uses the bottom
tone knob as a preamp volume and really screams.
I never really realized that was different then other EMG pickup setups
until recently when I got a couple of other EMG setups for other
guitars and was surprised that they just had two tone knobs like a
stock Strat setup. Anyone ever seen one of these?
Greg
|
674.38 | suggestions..... | ROYALT::BUSENBARK | | Fri Jan 04 1991 08:54 | 25 |
| I was looking for similiar functionality also,what I wanted to try
was a TC Electronic Booster+Linedriver and distortion pedal(BLD). up to a
30db increase :^) It has the capability to boost with or without distortion
emphasizes the even harmonics,but TC products are hard to find.
"Although graphic EQ's can add to the theoretical versatility
of an amp, in practice they actually only add to the number
of un-usable tones. The high-Q, narrow bandwidth, resonant
nature of their design adds an unalterable nasal characteristic
to the sound, and alters the natural harmonic balance of your
instrument."
A tube clean preamp boost and tone pedal would be the ticket I'd think,
but the Real Tube and Chandler really don't do this very well. I'd suggest you
stick to a tube device,the fet overdrive preamps are ok,but mainly geared to a
distorted sound.....
I'd suggest you just look for a gain boost mod for your Marshall,There
is a note somewhere which has a few these mods listed. It really depends what
your looking for and how much of a boost,the more of a boost,the more modifying
you'll need. Also you may want to consider taking Kevin's preamp boost
and putting it in a pedal...
Anyone know of a TC Electronic dealer in NH,Mass?
Rick
|
674.39 | TC Elec. | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Fri Jan 04 1991 09:06 | 14 |
| I was interested in the TC Electronics Sustain +Parametric EQ pedal
a while back. I found out that TC is out of business, but there is
an effort under way to resurrect them. I finally found a used TC
Sustain +Parametric pedal at Daddy's and was dissipointed with it.
The BLD pedal seems like a weirdo. It has a balanced XLR jack on the
side and TC claims you can drive it straight into a PA and get great
sound. I'm sceptical.
For what Buck seems to want, Kevin's idea of an on-board preamp seems
the best alternative. I used to use an MXR micro-amp years ago, and
it seems like this box would do the same basic job.
Mark
|
674.40 | Differing Opinion | AQUA::ROST | Dickie Peterson Wannabe | Fri Jan 04 1991 09:53 | 12 |
| Re: .38, .39
I played with a guy who used the TC BLD pedal as a front end to a
JC-120 (known for its lousy on-baord overdrive). It sounded great, to
me. It has a noise gate built into it.
I played with another guy who used the parametric EQ with a Boogie MkII
and it sounded good to me...
But then whadda I know?
Brian
|
674.41 | BOOST ideas | TRUCKS::LITTEN | | Mon Jan 07 1991 04:21 | 49 |
|
<< More Gain ?? >>
Greg,
If you want more gain, why not increase the first stages of your
amp or build in an extra IC amp ??
I agree that active electronics in the guitar will provide boost and is
"technically" the best solution.
Two thoughts......
1. If you have a solid state amp, I have often increased the front end gain
for fellow guitarists. It usually just takes a single resistor change ( can
even make it switchable). You can change the mod back with minimum effort.
This will have the same effect as an external boost pedal for a few cents.
On a recent mod, I simply soldered a resistor in parallel across the PCB
original, and increased the gain by a factor of three.
You can also do this for tube amps...but I have little experience in tube
design. I would guess that this would entail increasing the anode resistor,
but care would need to be taken to ensure you are not driving the tube into
clipping and therefore changing your "clean" sound. Perhaps some of the NOTES
Tube experts would like to post some thoughts?
2. Build in an IC front end into your amp. If you have some experience in
building a single opamp on "veroboard" then this should be straight forward.
You can run it via zener diodes from internal supplies (not needed for solid
state amps). Cost about 2 or 3 dollars.
P.S. Thanks to Rick Busenbark, I have the schematic for the Marshall Guv'nor
pedal. Built it over the weekend in an old sustain unit box. Sounds great !!
It really does sound like a Marshall !
It is designed around a single TL072 bifet opamp, and runs off a single 9 volt
battery. The bits cost me about 10 dollars.
An interesting thought......the front end of this is a variable (via the
"gain" control) amp from unity to around a gain of fifty. A simple switch
could disconect the internal LED's (used to provide the clipping), and convert
it into a low noise/vaiable boost pedal. Do you have this pedal Greg ? if so
mail me for details.....
Dave
|
674.42 | less is more | ICS::BUCKLEY | Sheena is a punk rocker! | Mon Jan 07 1991 08:43 | 5 |
| I think instead of jumping on the gain bandwagon, I think my
first "fix" will be to try and play with less distortion in
my overall sound...could only sound clearer imho.
B.
|
674.43 | What I use tone controls for . . . | HPSRAD::JWILLIAMS | | Wed Jan 09 1991 12:45 | 22 |
| I basically have two forms of tone control:
Hi Q parametric for the cancellation of feedback ( set to resonent frequencies
of the body ).
Lo Q ( three band ) graphic for basic tonality.
At high volume I turn the high frequency end down a little, as the ears tend
to hear high pitches louder with volume than low pitches. I also add
compression on high volume as the ear is alot more sensitive to the dynamics
of the lead melody and it can be a bit overwhelming. Also great for sustain.
Then again, you're talking to someone who uses a processor with a solid state
amp.
Maybe what you're looking for is something with parametric? TC electronics
makes a great pedal with parametric, boost, and compression all built in.
I think I still have one kicking around from the old days.
Let me rummage around.
John.
|
674.44 | TC rules for live rigs. | HPSRAD::JWILLIAMS | | Wed Jan 09 1991 12:50 | 5 |
| The sustain plus does not have infinite compression, but I believe that is the
last thing you'll need in a live situation. I don't think I've seen a better
stomp box for live situations.
John.
|
674.45 | Tube Screamer | STOHUB::TRIGG::EATON | | Fri Feb 01 1991 13:16 | 13 |
| RE: 674.26
> the "Tube Screamer" doesn't
> turn out quite as much fuzz but it can do a nice, subtle tube-like
> distortion-- it's the only pedal I've heard that can do just a smidge
> of distortion.
I just got one of these from Sam Ash. When I tried it out, I noticed
it can't be set to a "no-distortion" setting. I was hoping it would. Even
with the gain all the way down, it still has a constant distortion/overdrive.
Are we talking about the same pedal?
Dan
|
674.46 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Fri Feb 01 1991 13:28 | 4 |
| Yep, and Dan, you can set it to NO distortion.
Step on it !! ;)
jc
|
674.47 | | RAVEN1::JERRYWHITE | American made/no locking nuts ! | Fri Feb 01 1991 13:34 | 3 |
| Cute .... 8^)
Scary
|
674.48 | wise guy! | STOHUB::TRIGG::EATON | | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:22 | 6 |
| Somehow I knew someone would say that!
What I meant was having it set up so that when you played quietly it
wouldn't distort, but slightly louder would add a bite.
Dan
|
674.49 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:28 | 5 |
| A little off track but,
I hear that Marshall JCM900's do this very nicely. Something about the
instrument input sensitivity. What is it Buck ?
jc
|
674.50 | haven't heard one, but... | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Beware the gummy cereal! | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:30 | 4 |
| Along the same lines, I've heard that the Marshall Guv'nor stomp box is
responsive like that too.
Greg
|
674.51 | | GSRC::COOPER | Major MIDI Rack Puke (tm) | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:50 | 6 |
| I'll get a chance to hear a Gov'nor this Saturday...
It'll be plugged into a possible-vintage Marshall JMP (or JPM or...).
Gotta have one ! (A vintage Marshall that is).
jc
|
674.52 | Tube Screamer Roooooolz (like Buck says) | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | Greee Veee King | Fri Feb 01 1991 16:12 | 16 |
|
.48, right Dan, I know exactly what you're looking for... the closest
I've ever gotten to that "edgy" kind of over drive (without losing all
semblance of tone... I'm giving the secret sign now brothers ZXZ) was
my tube driver by chandler, but I played through an old tube screamer a
week or so ago, and it was incredible!!! I loved it, it didn't change
my fender amp tone.. it just edged it up a bit and gave a little more
sustain.. I'm still looking for one of these buggers because I'm told
that the new tube screamers (the only ones that IBANEZ will talk about)
don't sound as good...
Gree Vee King
|
674.53 | | DNEAST::BOTTOM_DAVID | victim of unix... | Mon Feb 04 1991 11:53 | 6 |
| While the tube screamer is ok, I don;t find it anything to call awesome. It's
got typical solid state distortion ie: somewhat sterile...
and yes I have a first revision tube screamer..
dbii
|
674.54 | Sam Adams for more bottom end | ASDS::NIXON | | Mon Feb 04 1991 12:51 | 17 |
| I've had an Ibanez 'Fat Cat' grunge-o-matic for about 4 years
now, and that has served me well - 60db of gain when it's cranked.
It just screams. I also have a DiMarzio X2N in my lead pos. and
that's a real hot p/u to begin with. But you tap that so's it's
acting as a single coil, and bring the fatcat dist. level down to
10-11 o'clock and you can get that tone that people have been
speaking of, clean/'edgy' unless you let rip, then it gets moving
again.
I think when talking about effects, you have to take into
account everything else in your chain, gtr/pu's, other effects,
amps, the kind of beer your patch cords are soaking in...
Has anyone else ever tried/owned a Fat Cat box? Comments?
Gripes?
|
674.55 | Mo Betta Tube Screamer.. | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | Greee Veee King | Mon Feb 04 1991 17:12 | 8 |
|
.53... so dooooood let's talk..... I can't believe that a rack effects
dood like you would have an old style ibanez tube screamer!!! How do
you get that cool tone through all the cables and patch bays?? [;^)
Greve Unit
Droolin over dbii's tube screamer!!
|
674.56 | Keeping it simple... | LEVERS::HERTZBERG | History: Love it or Leave it! | Mon Jun 13 1994 10:48 | 8 |
| From what I could see... Elvis Costello's guitar setup last night at
Great Woods :
Fender Jaguar ------> Rat ------> 2 AC30s
Getting some _very_ nice tones, both distorted and clean. He was
stomping that Rat on and off all night. A cool and underrated guitar
player too, IMHO.
|