Of course not... but... can you convincingly make a 5W AC30 top boost tone out of (1) 12AX7 and (1) EL84. I think I can. And the other rub - can you do it with a single tone control and volume?
I think you can. It's not perfect, but it emulates a decent TB tone control setting and a decent sweep of the cut control. It sounds good clean and driven, and definitely has the AC30 tone. It doesn't overdrive as hard, but it's decent. The clean tone is very nice, perhaps a little brittle, but as I recall that's about what it should sound like.
So why the hell would I do this? Long story, but someone asked me to build them an AC4 TV. I've never played one, I didn't have one I could listen to, all I had was that schematic and some stuff laying around that would work for the iron. It wasn't great stuff, and I told them that, but... So anyway I built to that schematic and they didn't like it. OK, I took it back. Honestly I didn't like it - I swapped the OT out, which made a big difference, but I still didn't like that circuit much. It's OK - it doesn't sound much like a VOX to me though. Sounds closer to a scaled down 18W Marshall, or perhaps a brighter Tweed Princeton. Whatever, it's not horrible, but it wasn't what I wanted.
I figured if I was going to be stuck with this stupid thing, I was going to figure something good out. I tried many, many, many different single knob tone control variations. All of them good at certain volumes, but all had issues at others. Hence the crutch of the single knob. Adding switches is cool, but I had this faceplate made up for the thing, and I didn't want to ruin it punching in more holes, so I was determined to find something (other than Tweed Fender) that was different, but good.
At first I was just testing and tuning, and I wasn't really getting there. I then decided I'd try a modeling approach. So I decided to do an AC30 full amp model and see how well I could match that without using a tone stack and keeping the gain as high as I possibly could, but still retaining a clean good clean tone (hard to do with just one preamp tube!). I had an iteration I played for quite a while that was pretty good, but it just didn't have quite enough gain and it didn't quite sound like an AC. The other day I took another stab at it and found a with a couple small tweaks I was able to get more gain and a better match to the preamp frequency response.
I've been playing it for the past couple days and I like it. I don't have a big AC anymore to compare to, but I listened to some clips and compared to my AC30 amplug (which is actually fairly convincing) and I think it's better than what Vox made... well it sounds more Voxy. Might have a bit more fuzz than I personally love at full tilt but I think that's typical for an AC with the treble cut off. It certainly has the chime down low and at mid-volume it sounds very, very close to clips I found online of current production AC30s.
I haven't updated a schematic yet, only what's in LTSpice. But perhaps I'll post it if anyone is interested. If you build it, LMK how convincing it is. You can of course do the spice model like I did and compare it to a big amp. You'll see where it's off (clearly in overall gain).
I've been playing it through my Weber CVA8 speaker and it does well. It's a dark speaker so I thought perhaps it might like this amp but oddly enough this is where it sounds the most fuzzed when pushed. Through a G12M, G12H and G12 Alnico Blue it sounds very composed and more crunchy when pushed. Also brighter through all 3. All sound good too, and all have a very different character. The Alnico Blue obviously sounds the most convincing though to a true top boost AC.
Today I gave it a test with a Ge Treble Booster and it was very nice. Pushes into decent distortion even with the volume set to max clean. Sounds a bit more Brian May when you really push the volume and tone of the amp and back off the booster level.
It was a fun, ongoing tinker and quite a challenge to see what one can get out of just two tubes and not be a complete one-trick pony.
I think you can. It's not perfect, but it emulates a decent TB tone control setting and a decent sweep of the cut control. It sounds good clean and driven, and definitely has the AC30 tone. It doesn't overdrive as hard, but it's decent. The clean tone is very nice, perhaps a little brittle, but as I recall that's about what it should sound like.
So why the hell would I do this? Long story, but someone asked me to build them an AC4 TV. I've never played one, I didn't have one I could listen to, all I had was that schematic and some stuff laying around that would work for the iron. It wasn't great stuff, and I told them that, but... So anyway I built to that schematic and they didn't like it. OK, I took it back. Honestly I didn't like it - I swapped the OT out, which made a big difference, but I still didn't like that circuit much. It's OK - it doesn't sound much like a VOX to me though. Sounds closer to a scaled down 18W Marshall, or perhaps a brighter Tweed Princeton. Whatever, it's not horrible, but it wasn't what I wanted.
I figured if I was going to be stuck with this stupid thing, I was going to figure something good out. I tried many, many, many different single knob tone control variations. All of them good at certain volumes, but all had issues at others. Hence the crutch of the single knob. Adding switches is cool, but I had this faceplate made up for the thing, and I didn't want to ruin it punching in more holes, so I was determined to find something (other than Tweed Fender) that was different, but good.
At first I was just testing and tuning, and I wasn't really getting there. I then decided I'd try a modeling approach. So I decided to do an AC30 full amp model and see how well I could match that without using a tone stack and keeping the gain as high as I possibly could, but still retaining a clean good clean tone (hard to do with just one preamp tube!). I had an iteration I played for quite a while that was pretty good, but it just didn't have quite enough gain and it didn't quite sound like an AC. The other day I took another stab at it and found a with a couple small tweaks I was able to get more gain and a better match to the preamp frequency response.
I've been playing it for the past couple days and I like it. I don't have a big AC anymore to compare to, but I listened to some clips and compared to my AC30 amplug (which is actually fairly convincing) and I think it's better than what Vox made... well it sounds more Voxy. Might have a bit more fuzz than I personally love at full tilt but I think that's typical for an AC with the treble cut off. It certainly has the chime down low and at mid-volume it sounds very, very close to clips I found online of current production AC30s.
I haven't updated a schematic yet, only what's in LTSpice. But perhaps I'll post it if anyone is interested. If you build it, LMK how convincing it is. You can of course do the spice model like I did and compare it to a big amp. You'll see where it's off (clearly in overall gain).
I've been playing it through my Weber CVA8 speaker and it does well. It's a dark speaker so I thought perhaps it might like this amp but oddly enough this is where it sounds the most fuzzed when pushed. Through a G12M, G12H and G12 Alnico Blue it sounds very composed and more crunchy when pushed. Also brighter through all 3. All sound good too, and all have a very different character. The Alnico Blue obviously sounds the most convincing though to a true top boost AC.
Today I gave it a test with a Ge Treble Booster and it was very nice. Pushes into decent distortion even with the volume set to max clean. Sounds a bit more Brian May when you really push the volume and tone of the amp and back off the booster level.
It was a fun, ongoing tinker and quite a challenge to see what one can get out of just two tubes and not be a complete one-trick pony.
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