I've become very interested in the subject of very low-powered, push-pull guitar amps, and I'm wondering if any of you have any thoughts as to the limitations of such amps in the sense of their ability to replicate or emulate the sounds of larger push-pull amps (or to sound just as good in slightly different ways).
I'm talking about amps in the .5 to 4 watt range, approximately. It seems as "mini Marshall" amps are the rage these days, but I don't know if that moniker is a euphemism for a very gainy little amp or if it really means that one can "scale down" a big Marshall amp and get essentially the same tone at a much lower volume. I've never heard of a mini Twin Reverb or a Mini AC-30. Why not?
It is very difficult to find any discussions about what is and what is not possible with very low powered push-pull amps, but lots of guys build them and say they sound great. For example, Doug Hammond's Firefly is a very popular 1.5 watt, amp using a self-split 12au7 as a power tube (if I am remembering correctly).
I'm talking about the limits of what is possible if one spares no expense, orders custom built transformers, custom built speakers designed especially for a two watt amp, etc. In other words, if someone with great expertise and resources goes all out to scale down a larger amp in every minute detail. Could one build a mini Fender Super Reverb that sounds very much like a cranked Super Reverb but at much lower volume? Could one build a mini Hiwatt that would be recognizable as a much quieter Hiwattish tone?
I realize that one can design a preamp that is similar to the larger amp, but obviously using a triode as a power tube is not the same thing as using a scaled down version of an EL-34 or a 6L6.
I'm guessing that the term "mini Marshall" does not refer to any type of scaling down of an EL-34 tube. That is obviously the case if one is using a triode as a power tube.
So if part of the characteristic tone of an AC-30 is the sound of an EL-84, (if there is such a sound) then one will never be able to build a 2-watt version of an AC-30 unless one could custom build a "scaled down" version of an EL-84, right? I'm asking how close do you think one could get?
I read recently that AC/DC didn't crank up their old Marshalls (JTM 45?). They put them on "4." But yet they had massive, juicy, very rocking tone that always sounded like it was on the edge of serious mayhem. Could one possibly build a two watt amp that could get that juicy, on the edge of breakup, AC/DC tone at less than half volume? Other than the Fletcher-Munson curve and the physics behind it (many thanks for the lesson, Enzo), are their other limitations that are involved?
Think of recorded tone more than live tone.
A guitarist once told me that he strongly prefers 100 watt amps over 50 watters, all other things being equal, and I still have no idea what the heck he was talking about. I probably told him that I prefer 2.5 watt amps to 15 watters.
I'm talking about amps in the .5 to 4 watt range, approximately. It seems as "mini Marshall" amps are the rage these days, but I don't know if that moniker is a euphemism for a very gainy little amp or if it really means that one can "scale down" a big Marshall amp and get essentially the same tone at a much lower volume. I've never heard of a mini Twin Reverb or a Mini AC-30. Why not?
It is very difficult to find any discussions about what is and what is not possible with very low powered push-pull amps, but lots of guys build them and say they sound great. For example, Doug Hammond's Firefly is a very popular 1.5 watt, amp using a self-split 12au7 as a power tube (if I am remembering correctly).
I'm talking about the limits of what is possible if one spares no expense, orders custom built transformers, custom built speakers designed especially for a two watt amp, etc. In other words, if someone with great expertise and resources goes all out to scale down a larger amp in every minute detail. Could one build a mini Fender Super Reverb that sounds very much like a cranked Super Reverb but at much lower volume? Could one build a mini Hiwatt that would be recognizable as a much quieter Hiwattish tone?
I realize that one can design a preamp that is similar to the larger amp, but obviously using a triode as a power tube is not the same thing as using a scaled down version of an EL-34 or a 6L6.
I'm guessing that the term "mini Marshall" does not refer to any type of scaling down of an EL-34 tube. That is obviously the case if one is using a triode as a power tube.
So if part of the characteristic tone of an AC-30 is the sound of an EL-84, (if there is such a sound) then one will never be able to build a 2-watt version of an AC-30 unless one could custom build a "scaled down" version of an EL-84, right? I'm asking how close do you think one could get?
I read recently that AC/DC didn't crank up their old Marshalls (JTM 45?). They put them on "4." But yet they had massive, juicy, very rocking tone that always sounded like it was on the edge of serious mayhem. Could one possibly build a two watt amp that could get that juicy, on the edge of breakup, AC/DC tone at less than half volume? Other than the Fletcher-Munson curve and the physics behind it (many thanks for the lesson, Enzo), are their other limitations that are involved?
Think of recorded tone more than live tone.
A guitarist once told me that he strongly prefers 100 watt amps over 50 watters, all other things being equal, and I still have no idea what the heck he was talking about. I probably told him that I prefer 2.5 watt amps to 15 watters.
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