I think the Ampeg paradigm that uses current sense resistors and comparators is very elegant. More companies should be using circuits like these -- they allow us to leverage cheap, solid-state devices to protect valuable, hollow-state devices. You couldn't ask for anything more. The only problems are that is that it takes some time to study the circuit, and that some people just have an aversion to SS devices.
We had a debate about the value of this protection paradigm quite some time ago, when I butted heads with SGM about the modern comparator technology going into the modern "Crate-Peg" SVT. He liked the traditional Ampeg circuits, and I thought the new ones from Loud Technology were better.
I think the circuits are definitely worth deploying, though they're probably out of reach for the hobbyist builders whose level of expertise amounts to copying a Fender or Marshall layout diagram.
We had a debate about the value of this protection paradigm quite some time ago, when I butted heads with SGM about the modern comparator technology going into the modern "Crate-Peg" SVT. He liked the traditional Ampeg circuits, and I thought the new ones from Loud Technology were better.
I think the circuits are definitely worth deploying, though they're probably out of reach for the hobbyist builders whose level of expertise amounts to copying a Fender or Marshall layout diagram.
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