Never got a clear answer on this.
I believe most of the small Valco Push pull amps I own were made to be played modestly... But once I get my hands on them, all of that goes out the window fairly quickly !
I play a variety of music, but most of it is 70's to 90's hard rock, so I usually drive the bejesus out of everything I own, and I am fairly sure I am putting an abnormal load on the output transformers of at least a few of my amps.
I've never had one that got hotter than around 125 deg F, but I have a feeling the output transformer was contributing to some type of clipping or compression to the final signal.
Anyone have a detailed explanation / experience in what driving an output transformer too far does to the signal ? And more importantly, the changes to the real world sound and response of an amp as a result of the punishment ?
Thanks for any inputs !
I believe most of the small Valco Push pull amps I own were made to be played modestly... But once I get my hands on them, all of that goes out the window fairly quickly !
I play a variety of music, but most of it is 70's to 90's hard rock, so I usually drive the bejesus out of everything I own, and I am fairly sure I am putting an abnormal load on the output transformers of at least a few of my amps.
I've never had one that got hotter than around 125 deg F, but I have a feeling the output transformer was contributing to some type of clipping or compression to the final signal.
Anyone have a detailed explanation / experience in what driving an output transformer too far does to the signal ? And more importantly, the changes to the real world sound and response of an amp as a result of the punishment ?
Thanks for any inputs !
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