This thread seems to be traveling off at some odd tangents now which I'm finding quite entertaining though somewhat confusing.
At first I thought one of the comments made by pdf64 related to the design of the amp this thread is actually about, namely the Marshall DSL 40C.
I have since realised that it related to the schematic chosen by J M Fahey, merely to illustrate that no component brands or colours were used in a circuit diagram.
It wasn't championing the design featured.
I understood that.
I also understood that it wasn't the schematic for my amp.
I like pdf64's joke about the tubes 'warming up quickly' :-)
tedmich has taken me on a totally different journey altogether!
Entertaining, though not entirely accurate.
Not that philosophy ever was...
Though I am not an electronic engineer, I have been playing electric guitar for over forty years (thirty professionally) and despite the dangers, do still have ears that work, albeit within a slightly limited frequency range.
The Fromel mod that I performed on my Fender Blues Deluxe almost transformed it into a different beast altogether.
It sounded and responded totally differently to how it did pre-mod. Tones that I had struggled to find it in before became easy to dial in, or change to something different but equally pleasing. It also felt like a small time delay had been removed from the signal chain (guitar straight into amp).
Difficult to explain but everything seemed to respond much faster making everything sound and feel more immediate. Notes seemed to fly off my pick and chords became much more glorious and expansive.
This was not something that my (failing - lol!) mind conjured up because I wanted it to happen out of 'expectation'.
I'm sure that some mods are a load of old cobblers, but others do actually bring positive results.
I know because I've also seen/heard both sides of the coin.
I tried an A/B test by recording a Tube Screamer pedal with different JRC4558 chips in, comparing Burr Brown, new 4558s and a 4558 I'd pulled from an early 80s Ibanez multi-effect - the one that people seem prepared to kill each other to obtain due to how the incredible 'mojo' of this little IC will bring you so much closer to SRV.
I recorded the same guitar part, with the same settings with only the chips swapped, on different tracks (straight through a Benchmark ADC to DAC converters in 24 Bit) and switched directly between them and I could not hear ANY difference between them whatsoever.
In fact it didn't even sound like I was switching between solo'd guitar parts at all. They were that close.
I concluded that the only way the vintage 4558 will bring you closer to SRV is if you hold onto one while peeing into 100 Watt Marshall head running at full power...
Meanwhile...
If anyone does have any real world suggestions for upping the DSL 40Cs game I'd be interested to hear them...
Cheers!
At first I thought one of the comments made by pdf64 related to the design of the amp this thread is actually about, namely the Marshall DSL 40C.
I have since realised that it related to the schematic chosen by J M Fahey, merely to illustrate that no component brands or colours were used in a circuit diagram.
It wasn't championing the design featured.
I understood that.
I also understood that it wasn't the schematic for my amp.
I like pdf64's joke about the tubes 'warming up quickly' :-)
tedmich has taken me on a totally different journey altogether!
Entertaining, though not entirely accurate.
Not that philosophy ever was...
Though I am not an electronic engineer, I have been playing electric guitar for over forty years (thirty professionally) and despite the dangers, do still have ears that work, albeit within a slightly limited frequency range.
The Fromel mod that I performed on my Fender Blues Deluxe almost transformed it into a different beast altogether.
It sounded and responded totally differently to how it did pre-mod. Tones that I had struggled to find it in before became easy to dial in, or change to something different but equally pleasing. It also felt like a small time delay had been removed from the signal chain (guitar straight into amp).
Difficult to explain but everything seemed to respond much faster making everything sound and feel more immediate. Notes seemed to fly off my pick and chords became much more glorious and expansive.
This was not something that my (failing - lol!) mind conjured up because I wanted it to happen out of 'expectation'.
I'm sure that some mods are a load of old cobblers, but others do actually bring positive results.
I know because I've also seen/heard both sides of the coin.
I tried an A/B test by recording a Tube Screamer pedal with different JRC4558 chips in, comparing Burr Brown, new 4558s and a 4558 I'd pulled from an early 80s Ibanez multi-effect - the one that people seem prepared to kill each other to obtain due to how the incredible 'mojo' of this little IC will bring you so much closer to SRV.
I recorded the same guitar part, with the same settings with only the chips swapped, on different tracks (straight through a Benchmark ADC to DAC converters in 24 Bit) and switched directly between them and I could not hear ANY difference between them whatsoever.
In fact it didn't even sound like I was switching between solo'd guitar parts at all. They were that close.
I concluded that the only way the vintage 4558 will bring you closer to SRV is if you hold onto one while peeing into 100 Watt Marshall head running at full power...
Meanwhile...
If anyone does have any real world suggestions for upping the DSL 40Cs game I'd be interested to hear them...
Cheers!
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