Hey All,
I'm looking for more recommendations for my modded amp. Specifically, I'm looking for anyone's feedback as to what kind of post-distortion EQ they might have tried on their amp.
My amp is a Fender Deluxe Reverb Reissue (DRRI) that I've heavily modded. Basically, I've taken the 12AX7 from "Normal" channel and reused it to make a Mesa Boogie Mark IIc-IV lead channel by (as done in the Boogies) cascading it after clean channel. I rewired the 12AX7 to put in all the correct (supposedly) tone shaping caps and resistors and whatnot. I even reuse the "volume" pot from the "Normal" channel to be the 2nd gain control for the lead channel just like in the Boogie. It all works pretty well. I'm fairly happy with it.
A critical part of the Boogie sound, though, is the 5-band graphic EQ that occurs after the overdrive but before the power amp. It's what allows you to sculpt the distorted sound from a midrange-heavy singing lead tone into a scooped-mids metal tone. The post-distortion EQ is the key to achieving anything besides a Santana sound.
In my amp, I have no 5-band EQ. I do, however, have an extra tone stack (Treble and Bass) left over from the "Normal" channel. So, I chose to loop the now-distorted lead signal back through the tone stack. When I fired it up, I found it to be fairly effective. Good. Of course, it really kills the overall signal level, so I had to boost it back up using half of the 12AX7 used by Vibrato circuit. No problem. I even re-wired the vibrato's "Speed" control pot as a volume pot for the lead channel. Sweet. It all works pretty well.
OK, now we come to my question...I like using the Fender tone stack as a post-distortion EQ....but, I'm sure that I could get an even better sound by tweaking it. The classic Fender tone stack was designed for clean tones...there's got to be room for improvement with distorted tones. As a first attempt, I used Duncan's Tone Stack simulator and found a set of values that seemed good...but once installed, it sounded really crappy. Since my amp is a PCB build, I can't swap components too many times without killing the PCB. So, maybe you all have some experience to help guide this journey with fewer iterations.
My question: Do any of you have a good recommendations for post-distortion EQ? Even if you haven't done an amp like mine, consider that a distortion pedal plugged into the front of your amp ends up having the amp's tone controls as a post-distortion EQ. Have any of you ever tweaked your tone stack to sound better with distortion pedals? What values worked best? What kind of EQ approach works best to sculpt overdrive?
Thanks,
Chip
I'm looking for more recommendations for my modded amp. Specifically, I'm looking for anyone's feedback as to what kind of post-distortion EQ they might have tried on their amp.
My amp is a Fender Deluxe Reverb Reissue (DRRI) that I've heavily modded. Basically, I've taken the 12AX7 from "Normal" channel and reused it to make a Mesa Boogie Mark IIc-IV lead channel by (as done in the Boogies) cascading it after clean channel. I rewired the 12AX7 to put in all the correct (supposedly) tone shaping caps and resistors and whatnot. I even reuse the "volume" pot from the "Normal" channel to be the 2nd gain control for the lead channel just like in the Boogie. It all works pretty well. I'm fairly happy with it.
A critical part of the Boogie sound, though, is the 5-band graphic EQ that occurs after the overdrive but before the power amp. It's what allows you to sculpt the distorted sound from a midrange-heavy singing lead tone into a scooped-mids metal tone. The post-distortion EQ is the key to achieving anything besides a Santana sound.
In my amp, I have no 5-band EQ. I do, however, have an extra tone stack (Treble and Bass) left over from the "Normal" channel. So, I chose to loop the now-distorted lead signal back through the tone stack. When I fired it up, I found it to be fairly effective. Good. Of course, it really kills the overall signal level, so I had to boost it back up using half of the 12AX7 used by Vibrato circuit. No problem. I even re-wired the vibrato's "Speed" control pot as a volume pot for the lead channel. Sweet. It all works pretty well.
OK, now we come to my question...I like using the Fender tone stack as a post-distortion EQ....but, I'm sure that I could get an even better sound by tweaking it. The classic Fender tone stack was designed for clean tones...there's got to be room for improvement with distorted tones. As a first attempt, I used Duncan's Tone Stack simulator and found a set of values that seemed good...but once installed, it sounded really crappy. Since my amp is a PCB build, I can't swap components too many times without killing the PCB. So, maybe you all have some experience to help guide this journey with fewer iterations.
My question: Do any of you have a good recommendations for post-distortion EQ? Even if you haven't done an amp like mine, consider that a distortion pedal plugged into the front of your amp ends up having the amp's tone controls as a post-distortion EQ. Have any of you ever tweaked your tone stack to sound better with distortion pedals? What values worked best? What kind of EQ approach works best to sculpt overdrive?
Thanks,
Chip
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