I have been experimenting with controlling the tone of the amp. I started out trying to just have normal tube stage ( say Fender 100K plate resistor, 1.5K cathode with 20uF bypass cap). I just experimented using simple high pass by small caps to couple to get the treble, or simple lowpass by using a pot in series with a cap to ground, adjusting the pot to attenuate the highs. Just very simple things to see the effect.
It did not take long for me to realize the simple filter like this does not sound too good. They tend to be very mid heavy, muddy with not enough bass and treble. You can't get the clear sound like Fender or Vox from simple high pass or low pass filters. Then I look at the Fender tone stack and some others, seems like the circuit is more taking away mid or low mid frequency rather than simple high pass and low pass circuits. More like a notch type of characteristic where it attenuates the mid band and let more of the bass and treble through. Of cause, they have pots to adjust also, but the general idea is to cut certain amount of mid frequency.
I remember I played with some tweet amps like old Gibsons with very simple tone control, they also sound very muddy until they break up and give a very sweet compressed sound.
That leads me to think maybe the tube stages are not the ones that govern the sound, the sound is mostly from the tone stack. All else are secondary.
Is that true?
It did not take long for me to realize the simple filter like this does not sound too good. They tend to be very mid heavy, muddy with not enough bass and treble. You can't get the clear sound like Fender or Vox from simple high pass or low pass filters. Then I look at the Fender tone stack and some others, seems like the circuit is more taking away mid or low mid frequency rather than simple high pass and low pass circuits. More like a notch type of characteristic where it attenuates the mid band and let more of the bass and treble through. Of cause, they have pots to adjust also, but the general idea is to cut certain amount of mid frequency.
I remember I played with some tweet amps like old Gibsons with very simple tone control, they also sound very muddy until they break up and give a very sweet compressed sound.
That leads me to think maybe the tube stages are not the ones that govern the sound, the sound is mostly from the tone stack. All else are secondary.
Is that true?
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