I'm an organ/keyboard player, not a guitar player, so I occasionally have some trouble understanding how guitar players describe what they're hearing.
For example, I just repaired a silverface Deluxe Reverb, and I carefully bench-tested it. It puts out a healthy 22 Watts clean before clipping with a sine wave input. B+ caps and cathode bypasses are new. Plate and cathode resistors are within spec. Tubes are good. It's biased correctly. Everything is textbook. However, the amp's owner says that this SF DR doesn't have "as much headroom" as his other silverface Deluxe Reverb. I've never seen the other DR, so I have no idea what mods may have been done to it. It may have had the PI blackfaced. I'll find out soon.
I grant that he's trying to tell me something real, so what do guitar players mean when they talk about "headroom"? And where should it point me in terms of figuring out how to address a concern about it as a technician when I'm pretty sure that an amp is objectively working as designed and putting out its rated clean power?
I should add that, yes, I do have an electric guitar to test amps, but I don't play well enough in any particular style to know if the amp is zeroed in on a particular style of playing. On organ, I know how to determine if it sounds right for jazz, rock, gospel, etc...
For example, I just repaired a silverface Deluxe Reverb, and I carefully bench-tested it. It puts out a healthy 22 Watts clean before clipping with a sine wave input. B+ caps and cathode bypasses are new. Plate and cathode resistors are within spec. Tubes are good. It's biased correctly. Everything is textbook. However, the amp's owner says that this SF DR doesn't have "as much headroom" as his other silverface Deluxe Reverb. I've never seen the other DR, so I have no idea what mods may have been done to it. It may have had the PI blackfaced. I'll find out soon.
I grant that he's trying to tell me something real, so what do guitar players mean when they talk about "headroom"? And where should it point me in terms of figuring out how to address a concern about it as a technician when I'm pretty sure that an amp is objectively working as designed and putting out its rated clean power?
I should add that, yes, I do have an electric guitar to test amps, but I don't play well enough in any particular style to know if the amp is zeroed in on a particular style of playing. On organ, I know how to determine if it sounds right for jazz, rock, gospel, etc...
Comment