Hey guys,
I recently tried out an amp with bias modulating tremolo (a Traynor YGM-3), and the tremolo was VERY pronounced at low volumes. But when I dimed the amp, the tremolo wasn't even noticeable unless playing softly.
I'm under the impression that this is totally normal, and here's why and please correct me if I'm wrong -
The bias modulating tremolo shifts the bias point by x volts, regardless of the input magnitude. This x volts might be enough to shift the output tubes into cutoff (or saturation?) during the dips of the tremolo for smaller signals coming out of the PI. But the same x volts might only have a very small effect on a large signal when the amp is cranked.
The Fender LDR style is configured as a voltage divider, so maintains a ratio regardless of amplitude at that stage of the circuit. So output compression and stuff aside, the tremolo amount should feel constant regardless of how cranked the amp is.
Yay, nay?
I recently tried out an amp with bias modulating tremolo (a Traynor YGM-3), and the tremolo was VERY pronounced at low volumes. But when I dimed the amp, the tremolo wasn't even noticeable unless playing softly.
I'm under the impression that this is totally normal, and here's why and please correct me if I'm wrong -
The bias modulating tremolo shifts the bias point by x volts, regardless of the input magnitude. This x volts might be enough to shift the output tubes into cutoff (or saturation?) during the dips of the tremolo for smaller signals coming out of the PI. But the same x volts might only have a very small effect on a large signal when the amp is cranked.
The Fender LDR style is configured as a voltage divider, so maintains a ratio regardless of amplitude at that stage of the circuit. So output compression and stuff aside, the tremolo amount should feel constant regardless of how cranked the amp is.
Yay, nay?
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