I recently acquired an old (early Seventies) Acoustic 150 head. I'd been curious about them for decades because one of my jazz heros used one, so when I found one for cheap I grabbed it.
I've been playing it for a month or so now. And my observations: It of course has that hard, clinical, transistory treble, which I don't love (though I must say I do enjoy the extended high treble frequencies that you don't get with tube amps). But I've found when comparing it to my tube amps that it has a much better TONE for instrumental playing. I'm talking exclusively about clean playing here, no distortion at all. It lacks the mid dip of the usual Fender/Marshall tone stack. Acoustic got something way right here. The upper mid/low treble region is just perfect. The notes practically jump off the guitar.
I'm starting to wonder how that might be duplicated in a tube amp - to lose that ugly hard, clinical treble, but keep those beautiful upper mid freqs. (There does seem to be less low mids muddying things up.)
So, a couple of questions. I know nothing about solid state tech. Can anything be learned from looking at the schematic that could be applied to a tube tone stack? And what are some possible approaches to getting that tone with a conventional or alternative tone stack, such as say the James (which I've never built and have only limited experience with)?
fetch (1041×762) (music-electronics-forum.com)
I've been playing it for a month or so now. And my observations: It of course has that hard, clinical, transistory treble, which I don't love (though I must say I do enjoy the extended high treble frequencies that you don't get with tube amps). But I've found when comparing it to my tube amps that it has a much better TONE for instrumental playing. I'm talking exclusively about clean playing here, no distortion at all. It lacks the mid dip of the usual Fender/Marshall tone stack. Acoustic got something way right here. The upper mid/low treble region is just perfect. The notes practically jump off the guitar.
I'm starting to wonder how that might be duplicated in a tube amp - to lose that ugly hard, clinical treble, but keep those beautiful upper mid freqs. (There does seem to be less low mids muddying things up.)
So, a couple of questions. I know nothing about solid state tech. Can anything be learned from looking at the schematic that could be applied to a tube tone stack? And what are some possible approaches to getting that tone with a conventional or alternative tone stack, such as say the James (which I've never built and have only limited experience with)?
fetch (1041×762) (music-electronics-forum.com)
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