My amp (brown Fender preamps and parallel 6V6's) distorts on high notes
in a way that I find a bit unpleasant and am wondering if this is normal for
my sort of tube amp or not. A single note on the high E string sounds ok
and looks ok on the 'scope. If I play a harmonic at the 12th fret I get a
pretty perfect sine wave. However, if I play two notes at the same time,
like a double stop, I get a raspy, gritty sort of distortion that jumbles the
two notes up and doesn't sound good to my ears. This is more apparent
with volume and treble close to max but it's present to a lesser degree at
lower volumes. Sounds a lot like solid-state clipping.
I've read that you can't get acoustic clarity out of a guitar amp but is this
the reason ? This is my first amp after playing acoustic for the last few
years so I'm used to clean notes and this may just be normal. The mid and
low end tone of my amp is very nice even when distorted at max volume.
I'd like to know if I should just knock down the high end to reduce the
grittyness or if I might have a more serious problem that I should look into.
Paul P
in a way that I find a bit unpleasant and am wondering if this is normal for
my sort of tube amp or not. A single note on the high E string sounds ok
and looks ok on the 'scope. If I play a harmonic at the 12th fret I get a
pretty perfect sine wave. However, if I play two notes at the same time,
like a double stop, I get a raspy, gritty sort of distortion that jumbles the
two notes up and doesn't sound good to my ears. This is more apparent
with volume and treble close to max but it's present to a lesser degree at
lower volumes. Sounds a lot like solid-state clipping.
I've read that you can't get acoustic clarity out of a guitar amp but is this
the reason ? This is my first amp after playing acoustic for the last few
years so I'm used to clean notes and this may just be normal. The mid and
low end tone of my amp is very nice even when distorted at max volume.
I'd like to know if I should just knock down the high end to reduce the
grittyness or if I might have a more serious problem that I should look into.
Paul P
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