ive been using a holden/wasp 200w (4x6550) amp for bass, as ive started playing bass in the band im in, and want to make a new preamp for the amp, as the preamp has alot of hum in it, and i just like making things (and getting trannies for such an amp suitable for bass wouldnt be cheap).
im thinking that it would be kind of cool to use a preamp idea ive had runnign through my head. the concept is to have 2 or 3 volume controls feeding into rc filters. one for bass(lowpass), one for treble(highpass) and maybe one for mids (band pass). id also have pots to adjust the upper and lower bounds of the bandpass for the mids, or if i didnt have the mid adjustment i'd adjust the break frequency of the low pass and high pass to determine how much low-mid and high-mids are allowed to pass through. if i had the mid, id adjust the break frequency of the low and high pass that make up the bandpass.
i know that id have to use a lower value pot for the mid control if it is there, as the mids will be covered by the low and high pass filters to an extent as well.
my questions are
-would this preamp have alot of losses compared to most systems? shunting alot of the signal to ground in each of the filters would be alot of losses in my oppinion. would a LC filter arrangement solve this problem? im planning on using a ef86 instead of a 12ax7 at the input, would the extra gain obtainable from it make up for the extra signal loss? i assume the mid control would add aot of losses to the preamp.
- would it be best to put the volume controls before or after the filters? i think it would be best to go before, but im not quite sure.
- would the output of the rc filters cause the signal coming through the other filters to be drained? or do they only effect the signal passing through them? if they do, it might be suitable to add a 12ax7 in there, to amplify the separate signals in a triode each after going through the filter, before they go into the cathode follower. this could also aleviate the increased losses of this system.
- and now a simpler question, what are the bounderies of what one calls mids, where does it become highs, and where does it become lows? seems simple, but im not sure? is 350hz considered low mids, or would that be 200, or 700?
thanks for any help and comments
im thinking that it would be kind of cool to use a preamp idea ive had runnign through my head. the concept is to have 2 or 3 volume controls feeding into rc filters. one for bass(lowpass), one for treble(highpass) and maybe one for mids (band pass). id also have pots to adjust the upper and lower bounds of the bandpass for the mids, or if i didnt have the mid adjustment i'd adjust the break frequency of the low pass and high pass to determine how much low-mid and high-mids are allowed to pass through. if i had the mid, id adjust the break frequency of the low and high pass that make up the bandpass.
i know that id have to use a lower value pot for the mid control if it is there, as the mids will be covered by the low and high pass filters to an extent as well.
my questions are
-would this preamp have alot of losses compared to most systems? shunting alot of the signal to ground in each of the filters would be alot of losses in my oppinion. would a LC filter arrangement solve this problem? im planning on using a ef86 instead of a 12ax7 at the input, would the extra gain obtainable from it make up for the extra signal loss? i assume the mid control would add aot of losses to the preamp.
- would it be best to put the volume controls before or after the filters? i think it would be best to go before, but im not quite sure.
- would the output of the rc filters cause the signal coming through the other filters to be drained? or do they only effect the signal passing through them? if they do, it might be suitable to add a 12ax7 in there, to amplify the separate signals in a triode each after going through the filter, before they go into the cathode follower. this could also aleviate the increased losses of this system.
- and now a simpler question, what are the bounderies of what one calls mids, where does it become highs, and where does it become lows? seems simple, but im not sure? is 350hz considered low mids, or would that be 200, or 700?
thanks for any help and comments
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