Probably not relevant to the original posted question in this thread, but I've found that many guitarists are perfectly happy to get distortion at lower sound levels by setting the 'vol.' or 'gain' high with the 'master' low. However, when they want clean high sound levels, they seem reluctant to put the 'master' at max and control the level with the pre-amp control.
The definition of 'headroom' that I like is: the input signal swing (in volts) that a stage or series of stages can tolerate before the output gets clipped. (Strictly speaking the positive-going headroom and negative-going headroom can be different.)
The average guitarist's concept of 'headroom' is therefore not far off the mark, but the problem is that the maximum headroom of the entire amp (assuming it is properly designed) is limited only by the output stage and can't be increased by changing pre-amp tubes.
The definition of 'headroom' that I like is: the input signal swing (in volts) that a stage or series of stages can tolerate before the output gets clipped. (Strictly speaking the positive-going headroom and negative-going headroom can be different.)
The average guitarist's concept of 'headroom' is therefore not far off the mark, but the problem is that the maximum headroom of the entire amp (assuming it is properly designed) is limited only by the output stage and can't be increased by changing pre-amp tubes.
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