T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2300.1 | Try a PA amp | KOAL::LAURENT | Hal Laurent, Loc: FOR, DTN: 378-6742 | Wed Aug 21 1991 18:27 | 12 |
| RE: .0
I've found that most guitar amps tend to make an acoustice guitar
sound like an electric guitar. My theory is that it's the way that
they're EQed. You might find that a cheaper alternative to the
Trace Elliot is to get a small PA amp. PA's seem to be EQed flatter.
I play my acoustic with thinline (under the bridge saddle) pickup
through an old Peavey 4-channel 100-watt PA head (with a 2x10 cabinet)
and think it sounds pretty decent.
-Hal Laurent
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2300.2 | Need Flat Response | RGB::ROST | Fart Fig Newton | Wed Aug 21 1991 21:51 | 17 |
| Guitar amps are EQed to give a lot of high end boost to try to create
something approaching flat response. Your average 12" only gets up to
5-6KHz which is like AM radio freq response. A bass amp with a 15"
might only get to 3KHz, that's like a telephone channel!
If you check the instructions for the Scholz Rockmodules, they
recommend running them either into a guitar amp and speakers *or* a
power amp with PA speakers, but *not* a power amp and guitar speakers
because there isn't enough high end.
The lousy high end response is what screws up the guitar amps, they are
boosting the highs so much to try to get something out of the drivers
that the tone gets very strident. The approach in past acoustic guitar
amps from Peavey, and I expect in the Trace, is to use a full-range
driver system to get a more transparent sound.
Brian
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2300.3 | High-tech for acoustic players | MILKWY::JACQUES | Vintage taste, reissue budget | Fri Aug 23 1991 13:27 | 41 |
| I guess the Trace Elliot amps were intended for the emerging
acoustic-electric market. I haven't heard one, but I noticed that
Daddy's Junky Music is now carrying them, as well as the Trace Elliot
bass amps. One big selling point of the Trace Elliot acoustic amp is
that besides the fact that they (supposedly) sound great, they are
also very portable. Galien Krueger also makes a small portable amp
intended for acoustic guitars *and* vocals. It has a vocal channel
with a balanced input, and a guitar channel. These aren't cheap
either, but I'm sure they are less expensive than the Trace Elliot.
I tried the Peavey amp which is designed for acoustics and
electric guitar. I think it was a "Reno" or "Nashville" model. I was
very impressed with the acoustic channel. At the time I was buying a
Dean Markley "Pro-mag" pickup and demoed the pickup through the Peavey.
The Pro Mag sounded great with absolutely no hum when played through
the Peavey. Even with the guitar held with the pickup directly in front
of the speakers there was no hum. I bought the pickup and have found that
it buzzes ad nauseum through my PA system at home. I still can't figure
out why the Peavey was so quiet considering the Pro Mag is a single coil
magnetic pickup. I have since bought a Dean Markley ZH7 (zero hum) model
which is a dual coil humbucking pickup. This pickup has about the same
sound as the Pro Mag without the hum.
The ZH7 produces a nice natural sound when played through my
PA system, but it helps if I EQ it a bit. I've tried playing the ZH7
and the Pro Mag through the clean channel of my Fender "The Twin" but
they always sound like electric guitar pickups through guitar amps.
Flat frequency response is definately required for getting a nice natural
acoustic sound. My acoustic pickups work pretty well through my Mesa
Boogie studio preamp, if I use the EQ and boost the high-end. Acoustics
need a bright high end to get a glittery sound.
Anyone ever try running an acoustic guitar pickup into something
like a Countryman direct box, and then into a PA system. The nice thing
about using a di box is that you plug the (relatively short) cable from
your pickup into the di and then run any length balanced cable you
want into your mixer.
Mark
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2300.4 | Heading Off The Subject, But... | RGB::ROST | Fart Fig Newton | Fri Aug 23 1991 14:13 | 19 |
| Re: direct boxes
Mark, I've done this when doing sound at a coffeehouse. The sound
varies in quality depending on the type of pickup. The direct boxes I
have access to are passive, so they will have the same type of loading
(impedance) problems you would get with a typical guitar amp, that is
loss of the low bass and weak signal. However, with some pickups it
has worked wonderfully.
It might seem odd using a direct in a situation where the instruments
are unamplified, but many players are getting used to the consistency
of the sound with pickups. They can move around and not have to worry
about getting off the mike.
My preference is still for a good microphone but the difference can be
slight. We tape many of the shows for radio broadcast and having a
pickup on the guitar guarantees a nice solid signal to tape.
Brian
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2300.5 | am I weird? | TOOK::SUDAMA | Living is easy with eyes closed... | Sat Aug 24 1991 10:28 | 19 |
| Ironically, I get the best sound out of my acoustic when I run it
through my guitar amp with less high-end. I normally run my electric
through an effects box with a compressor that slightly boosts the punch
in the high end (my amp is a Seymour-Duncan 100W combo with one 12).
My acoustic is a Martin HD-28 with a thinline, and I also use the
Fishman pre-amp to boost the signal.
For convenience when performing, I like to run both guitars into the
same effects unit and into the S-D. If I leave the compression on the
acoustic sounds too bright, but if I turn it off I get a nice sound
that's pretty suitable for both flat and finger picking. I can improve
it even more if I fool around with the EQ on the amp some, but I
usually don't bother.
To me, the acoustic sounds flat when played through the PA system. But
I'm not that much of a purist, maybe I've just gotten used to an
"electrified acoustic" sound.
- Ram
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2300.6 | Trace Is OK To My Ears | TECRUS::ROST | Raymond Burr 1917-1993 R.I.P. | Tue Sep 14 1993 16:01 | 12 |
| Two years later...
The violinist in my last band bought one of the Trace amps earlier this
year after years of running through regular electric guitar amps. The
difference is unbelievable. The sound is very natural (so much so that
when we recorded our CD, the engineer miked the amp rather than taking
the pickup direct!) and super loud. The notch filters get rid of
feedback honks and the on-board (Alesis?) reverb sounds nice and
smooth. He bought the mono 50 watt 2-speaker model, and still paid
about $800 for it...not cheap!
Brian
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