I just thought i'd mention this and see if anyone else does this. I spent many months, probably a year actually tweaking this marshallesque build that i've pestered you guys about for so long. But as we all know you can take what seems like a phenominal amp to a gig on;y to find in a band mix it's about as good as a $100 SS amp. I did the majority of my experimentation at work where the room in which i worked on it is a very dead and horrid sounding room. That exaggerated a lot of the issues i was fighting and could literally make them sound unacceptable even after they've been taken to very acceptable levels.
So here we have 2 problems....tweaking the amp in a acoustically horrible room, and evaluating the tone by itself instead of in a mix. Well, lately i have changed this and started tweaking it at home where it's very live and where i can crank music and play along. First of all the live room is great for this because it shows you whether the amp is going to be too bright or dark. I always found a too bright amp is hard to work with, while darker amps can be adjusted to work ok. So this way i've been able to choose component values that give me a range that allows me to adjust it so that a good usable tone can be had anywhere. Second, and this is the real reason i started this thread, playing it in a mix by jamming along with the music (all genres) cranked REALLY has opened my eyes in a big way !!! This isn't to say i didn't understand how amps that sound great can sound bad at a gig. I spent over 2 decades gigging constantly and went thru probably 50 more to how incredible just a single component can change that factor.
What i've been doing is leaving the chassis out and sitting on top of the amp with a soldering station next to it. Of course this only happens when my roomies (live in a studio in back of the main house) aren't home, so i can't do it any time i want. Anyways, with the amp out i choose a few dozen tunes of various genres and drop them into a MP3 player on my PC (have very good and loud speaker) and i start jamming along. As i do i will notice how well or not the tone fits into the mix. It's amazing what i've found. Things that sounded great when played by itself stick out of the mix like a sore thumb or sound TOO fat if you can believe that ! I can't adjust the amp so it fits either. I found that some things i tried would cause the high gain to not come thru the mix. It sounds crazy i know, but with certain component values or design aspects i could be playing with very high gain in the music mix and it sounded, felt, and sustained like i was using a much cleaner sound ! So as i'm playing along i will decide whats happening thats not good and turn off the music for a minute while i solder a different value somewhere or change a design aspect, then try it again. One nite i was having a heck of a time fitting in a mix at all, Things sounded so off, yet i had just changed things around days before that had me thinking the amp sounded better than ever and I was thrilled with it beyond words. Then i played it within a mix and was extremely disappointed to find this fantastic tone just didn't fit in a mix at all and in fact sounded like cr@p ! So i set it back to the last scenario that worked and instantly it fit like a glove and sounded great in the mix.
So this is how i have been making design/value decisions on my amp lately. I no longer gig, and even when i did thats not nearly as good a way to accomplish this because you need to do a gig just to decide whether one change works well or not, while doing it at home like this i'm able to evaluate dozens of changes in a nite. Anyways, i was just wondering whether many of you do this too or if i'm alone in this. l sure wish i'd have done this much earlier....i'd have saved myself countless hours behind a soldering station !
So here we have 2 problems....tweaking the amp in a acoustically horrible room, and evaluating the tone by itself instead of in a mix. Well, lately i have changed this and started tweaking it at home where it's very live and where i can crank music and play along. First of all the live room is great for this because it shows you whether the amp is going to be too bright or dark. I always found a too bright amp is hard to work with, while darker amps can be adjusted to work ok. So this way i've been able to choose component values that give me a range that allows me to adjust it so that a good usable tone can be had anywhere. Second, and this is the real reason i started this thread, playing it in a mix by jamming along with the music (all genres) cranked REALLY has opened my eyes in a big way !!! This isn't to say i didn't understand how amps that sound great can sound bad at a gig. I spent over 2 decades gigging constantly and went thru probably 50 more to how incredible just a single component can change that factor.
What i've been doing is leaving the chassis out and sitting on top of the amp with a soldering station next to it. Of course this only happens when my roomies (live in a studio in back of the main house) aren't home, so i can't do it any time i want. Anyways, with the amp out i choose a few dozen tunes of various genres and drop them into a MP3 player on my PC (have very good and loud speaker) and i start jamming along. As i do i will notice how well or not the tone fits into the mix. It's amazing what i've found. Things that sounded great when played by itself stick out of the mix like a sore thumb or sound TOO fat if you can believe that ! I can't adjust the amp so it fits either. I found that some things i tried would cause the high gain to not come thru the mix. It sounds crazy i know, but with certain component values or design aspects i could be playing with very high gain in the music mix and it sounded, felt, and sustained like i was using a much cleaner sound ! So as i'm playing along i will decide whats happening thats not good and turn off the music for a minute while i solder a different value somewhere or change a design aspect, then try it again. One nite i was having a heck of a time fitting in a mix at all, Things sounded so off, yet i had just changed things around days before that had me thinking the amp sounded better than ever and I was thrilled with it beyond words. Then i played it within a mix and was extremely disappointed to find this fantastic tone just didn't fit in a mix at all and in fact sounded like cr@p ! So i set it back to the last scenario that worked and instantly it fit like a glove and sounded great in the mix.
So this is how i have been making design/value decisions on my amp lately. I no longer gig, and even when i did thats not nearly as good a way to accomplish this because you need to do a gig just to decide whether one change works well or not, while doing it at home like this i'm able to evaluate dozens of changes in a nite. Anyways, i was just wondering whether many of you do this too or if i'm alone in this. l sure wish i'd have done this much earlier....i'd have saved myself countless hours behind a soldering station !
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