Matt,
The issue of voltages in the pre-amp has long been of interest to me. Since I was modding my DRRI, I was stuck with with the pre-amp voltages I had...basically ~260V. The Mesa Boogie pre-amp that I was emulating, though, runs at voltages up around 400V somewhere. I've always wondered how my low voltage levels affected the tone of the pre-amp relative to the real thing. Since I don't have a real boogie to compare to (and even if I did, my power amp and speaker are totally different), I can't answer that question.
It sounds like you, however, have built an amp and adjusted its pre-amp voltages. When it sounded "horrible", what was wrong with the sound? How did the sound get better when you used the right voltages?
Also, more on the theory side, I've wondered if the tone of an overdriven 12AX7 gain stage in a typical guitar amp is related directly to the supply voltage, or if the overdrive tone is more related how the tube ends up getting biased based on the supply voltage and surrounding resistors. If it is mostly a bias issue, some smart person would know how to scale the plate resistor and the cathode resistor so that my 260V supply would end up biasing the tubes to the same point as the 400V boogie pre-amp does. It gets complicated because this smart person would also have to change the coupling caps (and maybe other elements) in response to any change in plate resistor. Messy messy messy.
So, yeah, can you put any more words to your experience with the impact of pre-amp voltage supply on overdrive tone?
Thanks,
Chip
The issue of voltages in the pre-amp has long been of interest to me. Since I was modding my DRRI, I was stuck with with the pre-amp voltages I had...basically ~260V. The Mesa Boogie pre-amp that I was emulating, though, runs at voltages up around 400V somewhere. I've always wondered how my low voltage levels affected the tone of the pre-amp relative to the real thing. Since I don't have a real boogie to compare to (and even if I did, my power amp and speaker are totally different), I can't answer that question.
It sounds like you, however, have built an amp and adjusted its pre-amp voltages. When it sounded "horrible", what was wrong with the sound? How did the sound get better when you used the right voltages?
Also, more on the theory side, I've wondered if the tone of an overdriven 12AX7 gain stage in a typical guitar amp is related directly to the supply voltage, or if the overdrive tone is more related how the tube ends up getting biased based on the supply voltage and surrounding resistors. If it is mostly a bias issue, some smart person would know how to scale the plate resistor and the cathode resistor so that my 260V supply would end up biasing the tubes to the same point as the 400V boogie pre-amp does. It gets complicated because this smart person would also have to change the coupling caps (and maybe other elements) in response to any change in plate resistor. Messy messy messy.
So, yeah, can you put any more words to your experience with the impact of pre-amp voltage supply on overdrive tone?
Thanks,
Chip
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