I am reluctantly resigned to the fact that I really dont understand tube amps, altho Ive built two and been playing for 30 years! for eg I recently asked a Q here re speaker break up/ wattage relationship basics but got answers totally confusingly that didnt adhere at all to info I read countless times for eg "I think I'll try a lower wattage speaker to get some earlier break-up"). I was told there is no such basic rule of thumb at all.
The other basic parameter I dont understand is vol/ gain/ master volume which I want to ask here. I -do- understand that simply if say a fender Tweed amp is turned up it will distort (that being the amp will break-up/ the tubes will overdrive): that (although the physics I dont understand even reading countless times about it) I basically understand, & its simplified by the fact that there is only ONE volume knob. I also understand this tube saturation is most desired. It sounds the best as we all know and want.
But what are folks asking (about a decent tube amp as Ive read countless times) when they say 'it sounds great but I wish it had a master volume'-? I thought the only distortion desired for us Tube-Nuts was the natural tube satration by way of ONE volume knob, and that any 'added' volume/gain/MV knobs are 'Mickey-Mouse' approximations of the real thing.
Take for eg the Mesa Boogie Mark* combo. It has volume, gain, master volume. Why? what are these if they are not the -real McCoy- tube distortions? I'd understand if they were cheap practise amps (like my peavey bandit) but this is a pro quality high cost amplifier.
I have a rough idea any -extra- volume/gain/mv knob is something to do with increasing the input signal? (or pre-amp is it?) and not increasing the power amp side of things.. and so can this be termed an -approximation- of the real power-amp od.. but so why all the boogie knobs?
Thanks Sea Chief.
The other basic parameter I dont understand is vol/ gain/ master volume which I want to ask here. I -do- understand that simply if say a fender Tweed amp is turned up it will distort (that being the amp will break-up/ the tubes will overdrive): that (although the physics I dont understand even reading countless times about it) I basically understand, & its simplified by the fact that there is only ONE volume knob. I also understand this tube saturation is most desired. It sounds the best as we all know and want.
But what are folks asking (about a decent tube amp as Ive read countless times) when they say 'it sounds great but I wish it had a master volume'-? I thought the only distortion desired for us Tube-Nuts was the natural tube satration by way of ONE volume knob, and that any 'added' volume/gain/MV knobs are 'Mickey-Mouse' approximations of the real thing.
Take for eg the Mesa Boogie Mark* combo. It has volume, gain, master volume. Why? what are these if they are not the -real McCoy- tube distortions? I'd understand if they were cheap practise amps (like my peavey bandit) but this is a pro quality high cost amplifier.
I have a rough idea any -extra- volume/gain/mv knob is something to do with increasing the input signal? (or pre-amp is it?) and not increasing the power amp side of things.. and so can this be termed an -approximation- of the real power-amp od.. but so why all the boogie knobs?
Thanks Sea Chief.
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