I'm considering adding a spring reverb tank to a Mesa Boogie SOB. I've got a few questions...
The SOB (Son Of Boogie) was an early reissue of the Mark I, mine is from 1982.
I'm not sure if there were any SOBs made with factory reverb, however there were Mark I's, some with reverb some without, and the circuits are fairly similar though the SOB is somewhat more basic.
There are two spare 12ax7 size holes in the chassis (its a combo). There is also plenty of room in there to add things. Its a 60 watt version and they came in 100W so there is a lot of empty space in the chassis.
My main question is - what's the difference between tube reverb designs that use two tubes vs one? Most of the stuff I've found on Google forum searches are from people saying you *need* two extra tubes (actually one and a half which means in practice, two). The fender design seems to have this, with the driver tube using both halves of the tube (usually a 12AT7 it seems) in what looks like parallel on the schematic.. The second tube only needs one half of it, usually a 12AX7, for the return.
There are other designs, such as the Mark I, with only one tube for the reverb, a 12AX7, using half of it for the driver and the other half for the return. I'm pretty sure my Studio .22 is the same, with one 12AX7 for the reverb (but only a short tank which eventually I'll swap for a proper long size one).
What's the advantage of having two halves purely for the driver? Since it would be nice to only have to add one extra tube. Most people say the fender reverbs sound better than the Boogie ones, is it the extra driver half tube that improves the tone? I can choose whatever tank I like with appropriate impedance etc and I understand how the accutronics codes work for the different types of tanks.
I've also read that the reverb transformers used in early Boogies are the same as the standard Fender ones that are easily available.
Other than that, I would have to verify that the PSU can handle the extra current for the extra tube (or two). My guess is that it would since the amp is only 60W, and there are all the extra spaces to add things and presumably Mesa didn't have a huge number of different transformers for every variation of options, so I would assume there's enough balls in the PSU for at least one extra 12AX7, and maybe another? But would have to check it out in detail obviously.
I was reading about reverb pedals as an option and everything seemed to say that a real tube spring reverb is much nicer.
The SOB (Son Of Boogie) was an early reissue of the Mark I, mine is from 1982.
I'm not sure if there were any SOBs made with factory reverb, however there were Mark I's, some with reverb some without, and the circuits are fairly similar though the SOB is somewhat more basic.
There are two spare 12ax7 size holes in the chassis (its a combo). There is also plenty of room in there to add things. Its a 60 watt version and they came in 100W so there is a lot of empty space in the chassis.
My main question is - what's the difference between tube reverb designs that use two tubes vs one? Most of the stuff I've found on Google forum searches are from people saying you *need* two extra tubes (actually one and a half which means in practice, two). The fender design seems to have this, with the driver tube using both halves of the tube (usually a 12AT7 it seems) in what looks like parallel on the schematic.. The second tube only needs one half of it, usually a 12AX7, for the return.
There are other designs, such as the Mark I, with only one tube for the reverb, a 12AX7, using half of it for the driver and the other half for the return. I'm pretty sure my Studio .22 is the same, with one 12AX7 for the reverb (but only a short tank which eventually I'll swap for a proper long size one).
What's the advantage of having two halves purely for the driver? Since it would be nice to only have to add one extra tube. Most people say the fender reverbs sound better than the Boogie ones, is it the extra driver half tube that improves the tone? I can choose whatever tank I like with appropriate impedance etc and I understand how the accutronics codes work for the different types of tanks.
I've also read that the reverb transformers used in early Boogies are the same as the standard Fender ones that are easily available.
Other than that, I would have to verify that the PSU can handle the extra current for the extra tube (or two). My guess is that it would since the amp is only 60W, and there are all the extra spaces to add things and presumably Mesa didn't have a huge number of different transformers for every variation of options, so I would assume there's enough balls in the PSU for at least one extra 12AX7, and maybe another? But would have to check it out in detail obviously.
I was reading about reverb pedals as an option and everything seemed to say that a real tube spring reverb is much nicer.
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