Stvy
new member
Joined: 02/03/03
Posts: 56
Loc: Bergen...
|
Valve Amp power Attenuators...
#62858 - 15/12/04 09:45 AM
|
|
|
Hi, Can some tell me about the valve amp power attenuators… I am thinking
of the Marshall Power break and the THD HotPlate. http://www.marshallamps.com/images/products/powerbrake/powerbrake.html
http://www.thdelectronics.com/products/hotplate.htmI want
to be able to get Power tube distortion out of my amp at a more sane volume level. At the
moment I have a 100W Marshall 6101 combo. I have used it in the past at high volumes
(where the power tube distortion kicks in) and it is smokin’. However I want to be
able to start doing a few recordings at home (in the apartment) during the day and thought
that one of these signal attenuators could do the job nicely… Please no POD
recommendations I want to mic up a valve amp! I have read the Harmony central
reviews and the Powerbreak gets a bit of a slating for being weak sounding and the THD
gets great reviews up to -12dB attenuation. Now my question is: If I have a
100W amp and I half the perceived loudness that means I have to have it down to 10W.
Right? So that’s -6dB is half power? Now 10W is still going to be VERY loud in an
apartment. So I would need -12dB to get it down to 1W. Now that’s a lot to ask of a
power attenuator without messing with the tone. PLease anyone with
experience of this chip in... Cheers Steve
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#62970 - 15/12/04 12:57 PM
|
|
|
|
Hi,
By some strange coincidence I also have a Marshall 6101 - mines an LM
version - and am on the lookout for an attenuator.
100w down to 10w is 1/10
power, which is 10dB attenuation. Down to 1 watt is -20dB .
Have you used
the Marshall in half power (50 watt) mode? Then -12dB gives just over 3w, which should be
manageable and recordable without upsetting the neighbours.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|
Stvy
new member
Joined: 02/03/03
Posts: 56
Loc: Bergen...
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Shingles]
#62988 - 15/12/04 01:16 PM
|
|
|
Hi, Yeah ?I have played around with the 6101 in the pentode triode and full
half power modes... These give the 100w 50w (pentode or triode) and 25W
possibilities. However they don't sound as good (to my ears) as the full on
100W. I am confused about the attenuation and the perceived loudness of the
amp. I know 10W to 100W is ten times the power. However to the ear it is only
twice as loud. The ear is logarithmic right? So if I cut a single by 6dB (if
its sound power) then thats halfing the sound power? So -6dB would bring 100W
down to 10W So -12dB would bring 100W to 1W Right? Please correct me if I
am wrong BUT please explain it.... What I like to do is tame my 100W down to
about 1W MAX. If I can get it down to 0.5W even better.... On a different
note it would seem that THD make EXACTLY what I am looking for but wihtout the effects
loop http://www.thdelectronics.com/products/univalve.htmNow if
only this had a valve driven effects loop I would buy one.... Cheers Steve
|
The Stig
member
Joined: 26/10/03
Posts: 159
Loc: Oslo, Norway
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63007 - 15/12/04 01:51 PM
|
|
|
As we're talking dB SPL (sound pressure level) here, a halving of the power actually gives
a 3dB reduction, not 6dB (as far as I know the -6dB rule only applies when dB is used in
relation to voltage (V), not in relation to power (W)).
I'm guessing that
your Marshall combo probably puts out in excess of 100dB SPL at the point of power tube
distortion. That means that the best-case scenario with the THD will be around 90dB SPL -
that's stillas loud as a ambulance siren. If you first reduce the output of the amp (you
could take it as far as 25W, right?) you should be able to get it down to 94dB from the
amp, and then subtract an additional 12dB with the hot plate would give you 82dB SPL. This
will be (a bit of guesswork here) roughly equal to someone speaking very loudly (threshold
of yelling).
On second thought: Power-amp distortion probably doesn't set in
before you're closer to 110dB SPL. Adjust the figures accordingly.
You could
check this site out for more on dB's:
http://www.jimprice.com/prosound/db.htm
Stig
Edited by The Stig (15/12/04 01:53 PM)
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: The Stig]
#63037 - 15/12/04 02:37 PM
|
|
|
Quote The Stig:
As we're talking
dB SPL (sound pressure level) here, a halving of the power actually gives a 3dB reduction,
not 6dB (as far as I know the -6dB rule only applies when dB is used in relation to
voltage (V), not in relation to power (W)). Stig
Yeh. That's right. 100 watts down to 10 watts is a power
reduction to one tenth. That's a dB reduction of 10. From 10w to 1w is another tenth -
another 10dB. So 100w down to 1w is total 20dB reduction.
Halving the power
from 100w to 50w is a reduction of 3dB.
100w amp with 12dB attenuation is
6.25watts.
I find my 6101LM sounds the same at 50watts as at 100watts, and
barely any less loud. Switching to Triode from Pentode does soften the sound, takeing the
edge off. OK for practice, but not to my likeing for stage or critical recording.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|
SunShineState
Joined: 01/09/04
Posts: 1035
Loc: London
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63044 - 15/12/04 02:44 PM
|
|
|
|
Get a POD - much better for recording
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: SunShineState]
#63070 - 15/12/04 03:43 PM
|
|
|
Quote SunShineState:
Get a POD -
much better for recording
No
way will any digital modelling shite every produce the pure, brew-tal distortion of the
Marshall 6101 30th Anniversary - probably the greatest Marshall ever, and so probably the
greatest amp in the world ever. My guitar drips tone through an all valve Marshall and
modelling is for wimpy country rock kinda Telecaster players! 
Oh, and I use a Boss GT-6 direct to desk for recording, and usually it's the GT-6 direct
to PA for live work as well.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|
SunShineState
Joined: 01/09/04
Posts: 1035
Loc: London
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63073 - 15/12/04 03:53 PM
|
|
|
|
Point that I'm really making is "horses for courses" - valve amps sound great cranked up
hammering through speakers in a live situation - and part of this sound is the sheer
volume of it - if you use an attenuator or similar I believe you will not be so happy with
the sound, and so for recording I believe you may get a sound closer to what you want with
"digital shite". Personally I have two Marshalls - including a 50w all tube from 1976 (not
quite 30 years old yet) - but I find it rather boxy sounding recorded! Cheers
|
Mr Boules
Joined: 01/09/04
Posts: 1676
Loc: Vacation
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: SunShineState]
#63104 - 15/12/04 04:42 PM
|
|
|
Or if you have a flair for making things you could look here.
http://www.scopeboy.com/ssim.html
And here.
http://www.scopeboy.com/tesla/index.html
|
Stvy
new member
Joined: 02/03/03
Posts: 56
Loc: Bergen...
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Shingles]
#63170 - 15/12/04 06:27 PM
|
|
|
|
Hi,
I have done a A-B test on a POD and a real amp. I am sorry yeah its
'good' but real valves IMHO takes you to an extra level of electric guitar- amp synergy.
It is just inspiring to play the guitar! With my Lexicon MPXG2 and also a POD pro xt I
tried it just feels gimmicky.
What I am after is the ability to 'tame the
beast' enough to be able to record some killer guitar. I am unable to get the killer
inspiring sound I am after with my lexicon or a pod or guitar rig (demo version) and
belive me I tried... That is why I have come full circle and am convinced I need to be
approaching the task properly:
Valve preamp and power amp sound cannot be
bettered at the moment. It is just a question of me being able to enjoy that in practice
and at a gig at a realistic volume and to be able to record it easier. Having a much lower
volume would enable easier recording: You can trust yours ears more, if it sounds good at
the lower volume then thats the sound you generally get recorded.
For example I
considered the ZVEX nano-head which is a 0.5W valve amp. it is a GREAT little amp and
suprisingly loud if you crank it. It is great to record with but it is a bit of a 1 trick
pony. And the sound is very good but not what I am after. However it made me think that
because it is so great to record with (because of the low power) that I could get some
great recordings (and have an amp I love to practice and gig with) if I could lower the
power on my 6101.
OK.. So with my Marshall I can put it to half power. This
will give me 50W. So with a THD hotplate I would have -16db (maximum attenuation), -12db,
-8db, -4db (minimum attenuation) or 0db (no atten.)
I have read reviews of the
THD hot plate that all seem to say at -16dB the sound is not the best but at -12dB it is
very good.
So 50W with 12dB of attenuation is 3.125W. (I can run the 6101 at
half power using only 2 output tubes and I can just swop them around with the other two.
This way I will cook em at the same rate.)
Now to be perfectly honest I reckon
a 3.125W valve amp would still be pretty loud pushing say a 4x12 cabinet (1 option) or a
single 1x12 (option 2). But exactly how loud I don't know. Would it be possible to talk
over it? To shout over it? Would it be ok in an apartment ish situation?
The final option would be to run the 6101 in 25W mode (which is the pentode triode mode
trick at half power). Now this does not as shingles agress sound quite as good... But that
would give me 1.5625W.... So what would this be like?
Now the next question is
NOISE. My 6101 does start to hiss in an great aggressive kond of way when I crank it. I
can't remember the last time I serious cranked it up though but it did hiss a little too
much. I have read that the hotplate does filter out the hum a little. (My strat has Kinman
noiseless pickups in it and I am plannign to shield the cavity and redo the wiring with
shield wire this christmas. So I hope this would not be too much of a problem.)
Ok so the other alternative is a lower wattage amp to start with.... The THD univalve
looks intersting. However what I really want does not seem to be available...
Surely I can not be the only person on the planet who would buy a fully featured all
valve low wattage amp. All the great low wattage amps tend to be single channel with no
effects loop...
On a slightly off topic note - Shingles have you ever
played the non LM version of the anniversary? I am told the only difference is the 3rd
channel. I have the non LM original version and while the 3rd channel is very good it is
not so different to the 2nd channel fully cranked. At the risk of being flamed it is a bit
too american sounding for my likeing (and for a Marshall for that matter!).
I
bought my 6101 in 1996 2nd hand and have absolutely loved it... Its a great amp... and
with midi channel switching as well. I don't think that Marshall has made much progress
since then.. The TSL seems to my ears very similiar and without all the features that make
the 6101 so useable.
Thanks for the help!
Cheers
Steve
|
Spyder
member
Joined: 28/01/04
Posts: 444
Loc: Cambridge, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63305 - 15/12/04 11:08 PM
|
|
|
I've been pondering the same question recently, my Fender Twin needs to be in the next
building when its cooking! So I've just bought a 30W Laney which can have 2 tubes pulled
to give 15W. I think I will be able to get away with playing this full on, for a short
while at least, or when the neighbour is at work. Enough to record a track with some hot
tube action. Torres do a 0.5W all tube amp I think, specifically for recording. Not
cheap but good. Can't remember if it as more than one channel. Do you really switch
channels while recording? I usually layer different sounds as it is difficult to get the
levels set up before you do the mix. That's the way I'm approaching it. Also, if you
aren't happy with your 3rd channel, perhaps it needs a tube swap. Again Torres can sort
this for you, or if you know what you are after, order from Watford valves. Right, I
need sleep now. Not well. Hope it hasn't fuddled my brain.
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63418 - 16/12/04 10:07 AM
|
|
|
|
Firstly, 3.125 watts into a 4 x 12. Well, the drivers in a 4 x 12 are going to be rated
somewhere between 97 and 103 dB per watt at 1m. So in theory, 1m from the cab, you will
get between 101 and 108dB sound pressure level (SPL). No, you cannot talk over that. That
is pretty loud.
1.5 watts will give somewhere between 98 and 105dB. Still too
loud to hold a conversation over, but I would say that's manageable.
I did have
a 6watt valve guitar amp with a 10 inch speaker. So twice the power we are talking about,
but a less efficient speaker. Cranked up, it was too loud to talk over, was as loud as I
ever have my 50watt per channel stereo, but not lud enough to annoy the neighbours in the
next (detached, double glazed) house.
The Thirtieth Anniversary Series: The 6100 and 610 1 were introduced in 1992. Power valves were EL34 - traditional
Marshall. Late in '93, EL34 supply dried up and Marshall had to change over to
either 6L6 or (closely related) 5881 types for ALL their amps. They have taken a lot of
stick for this, but the decision was forced on them by the valve manufacturers at the
time. In 1994, due to perceived demand, Marshall increased the gain on the red
channel of the 610* amps and added the LM (Lead Mod) suffix. I played one back in '95
in a shop, but don't know what variety it was. I bought my 6101LM one year ago, based on
the memory of the '95 encounter, and it lives up to that.
I agree that the
'Annys' haven't been bettered by Marshall. I also use the MIDI switching. But the TSL is,
to my mind, a different beast. The TSL has three channels, all of which are Marshally:
Marshall clean; vintage Marshall - like a plexi or Master Volume or JCM800, and Marshall
High Gain, like a JCM900SLX. The Anny has all those sounds just on the crunch channel. The
green and red chann els are not meant to sound like Marshalls. Green = Fender clean. Red
is somewhere between a Soldano and a Peavey 5150.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63421 - 16/12/04 10:20 AM
|
|
|
|
As for hum and hiss in the 6101. Hum may be due to filter caps drying up. You need a good
tech to soirt this out.
Hiss is likely to be failing or low-quality valves. Try
swapping some valves around and see if it makes a difference.
And yes, there
must be many people who would pay for a fully featured, multi-channel, high gain, low
power amp. I had GAS for a Boogie Mark IV since they were introduced in the late 80s. I
always thought they should make a version with just the 15watt class A power amp. But hey,
the Anny cured my GAS. Just a cool and versatile as the Boogie, but with that British
accent the Mark IV lacks.
Yes, I want to try it with an attenuator and no, I
have not yet tried recording it from the compensated line output.
Like I said,
for recording and most live use I use a Boss GT-6 direct to the PA or recorder.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|
Andi
Joined: 02/09/04
Posts: 1107
Loc: Berkshire, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63475 - 16/12/04 11:49 AM
|
|
|
Folks, for what it's worth, I use a JCM800 and a Mesa Rectoverb with a THD Hotplate.
Experience shows that these amps are not at their best turned to 10 - there is a sweet
spot around 5 - 8 on the master. Set the volume controls where they work best and then
use the attenuator to set actual volume. Bear in mind that not all valve amps
will actually overdrive the power stage - some manufacturers (Marshall included) have
produced valve amps where you just can not do this - saves a lot of money on warranty
claims apparently. You can test with a master volume amp by turning the MV to 10. the pre
amp volume to 1 and the listen - some amps are still clean. If you do this with a good
amp that will overdrive the power stage (like the JCM800) then you can get very close to
the plexi sound. At very low volumes (like night time practise) the sound does
lose definition, the deep and top end boosts on the THD do a pretty good job of recovery
but it is NOT quite the same. For recording I bought a Behringer DI box with
amp sim (GI-100 Ultra I think) for £30. Run this from the line out of the THD, set the
THD to LOAD (ie no sound from the cab) and you get an amazingly good, real overdriven
valve sound at line level. I know some folks who prefer the Powerbreak and
others who prefer the Hotplate - try and see. Note that although the THD comes in
different models for different impedance reatings, you are OK so long as you match the Hot
Plate to the amp. So I have a 8 ohm Hot Plate - I can use my JCM head set to 8 ohms into
the 8 ohm HP - then plug into a 16 ohm cab. The amp still sees 8 ohms, the only thing is
that the deep and top boosts don't work quite so well (this is how the Univalve gets by
with one attenuator, but you can plug it into virtually anything). THIs info is direct
from the excellent Ed De Ginaro at THD (apologies if sp is incorrect - this is from
memory). Oh, and the Univalve has a big brother called the Bi Valve - 30 Watts,
has an FX loop, run it on low power, with 1 output valve - put al EL84 and you have about
5 W flat out - and then it has an attenuator built in. And I have one to sell! Andi
-------------------- Andi, www.thedustbowl.net Mixing, Mastering, Audio Editing at The Dustbowl Audio
|
The Stig
member
Joined: 26/10/03
Posts: 159
Loc: Oslo, Norway
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63544 - 16/12/04 01:35 PM
|
|
|
|
Or you could consider a silent speaker - you know the inverted ones where the speaker is
actually in the box? Just a thought...
Stig
-------------------- If it sounds GOOD to YOU, it's bitchen; and if it sounds BAD to YOU, it's
shitty. -FZ
|
Andi
Joined: 02/09/04
Posts: 1107
Loc: Berkshire, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: The Stig]
#63553 - 16/12/04 01:50 PM
|
|
|
But you can use an attenuator for recording, home practice and on stage - every amp should
have one.
-------------------- Andi, www.thedustbowl.net Mixing, Mastering, Audio Editing at The Dustbowl Audio
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Andi]
#63635 - 16/12/04 04:27 PM
|
|
|
Quote Andi:
But you can use an
attenuator for recording, home practice and on stage - every amp should have one.
Amen. I actualy have my eye
out for a Marshall Se100. It's a rack mounted powerbrake with all kinds of extra
adjustments and tweaks on it.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|
Andi
Joined: 02/09/04
Posts: 1107
Loc: Berkshire, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Shingles]
#63647 - 16/12/04 04:47 PM
|
|
|
Hey, let us know what you think when you try one. A.
-------------------- Andi, www.thedustbowl.net Mixing, Mastering, Audio Editing at The Dustbowl Audio
|
Stvy
new member
Joined: 02/03/03
Posts: 56
Loc: Bergen...
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Andi]
#63706 - 16/12/04 07:52 PM
|
|
|
|
Hi,
Ok well I have had a bit of a thought about this… Namely why you
can’t seem to get an effects loop on these low wattage valve amps… (OK I know
the bivalve has one!)
Effects loops place the effects in the signal chain after
the preamp and before the power amp. High power (100W) amps are not often used at such a
volume as to have power tube distortion. So the effects will stay clean. If however you
have a low wattage power amp (or attenuate a high power) then you are going to get power
tube distortion. This will cause the effects to be distorted. Now some effects are ok with
having distortion added after but some do not react well to this… I like my time
based effects after any distortion/overdrive/fuzz.
So it seems to me that the
best way to do this would be for the purposes of recording to recording everything dry
(which is good practice anyway), but this still means I can’t really practice or
compose with a smoking valve sound and time based effects. I will need to add another amp
to the equation.
What I will need is a very low wattage amp (or an attenuator)
which I can get a preamp and power amp distortion sound from and then feed this into
another amp which is set for a clean sound. I can then add effects inbetween. The THD
powerplate or the Univalve head seems to allow me to do this.
Ok so the setup I
would be looking at is:
THD univalve (18W all valve head with built in
attenuator) line level output
Time based effects.
Into my Marshall 6101, line level input jack to take an external pre-amp thus using
just the power stage of the amplifier.
The benefit of this setup is I can
treat the Univalve as the mother of all stomp boxes or pair the setup down into a simple
Univalve 6101 speaker (bypassing the 6101 amp altogether)
The problem would be then that I need to go and play with a univalve head to test if I
like it, and I’ve heard that because of the combinations of valves you can use with
it it takes a lot of test driving.
Another solution would be to try the
Univalve line level out into a POD XT type thing to get the speaker simulation part of the
sound?
All of a sudden this has started to get rather too expensive….
Maybe I will just pick up a THD hotplate and try it out on my 6101 for a while and see
what happens. If I want the mimimum distrurbances to neighbours then I'll use just the
1x12" speaker which is 8 Ohm so a 8 Ohm hoptplate it is...
Andi.... Can you PM
me about the bivalve? If I only use 1 power tube then thats basically the univalve with
the extra features, right? To be honest a bivalve is to much £££ for me but if the
price is right....
Cheers
Steve
Cheers
Steve
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63721 - 16/12/04 08:43 PM
|
|
|
|
How about:
Guitar > frequency based FX > smokin valve amp on 10 > dummy load
(Palmer speaker simulator, Hotplate, Power Brake) and maybe a single cabinet for the dry
sound > line out to time based FX > stereo, high power solid state power amps > several 4
x 12 cabs.
That's what Eddie Van Halen has been doing on stage since the mid
70's.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#63722 - 16/12/04 08:46 PM
|
|
|
|
What we really need is an effect box that goes in the FX loop of a high power amp and
simulates the sound of a valve power amp being overdriven.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|
D@ve
Joined: 27/05/04
Posts: 277
Loc: Oxford
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#64097 - 17/12/04 04:33 PM
|
|
|
I'm thinking of this solution to as a possbility (but mainly for recording purposes)
but... What I would like to know is: 1. What level of tone loss
occurs by bringing down the volume level down say 50% or 75% 2. How much difference
is there tone-wise recording at low level into a mic as there is at a higher level (i.e.,
no attenuation) I currently have a 6W Cornford Harlequin. But this is still
way too loud when cranked up to its sweet spot especially for lead work and is causing
problems with resonance in the room at high levels as well as just being too damn loud!
i'm thinking if i can get the volume down by 50% or so it may be acceptable but i don't
know what affect this will have when it comes to recording the amp. I don't
want to compromise tone and need to record the excellent solid tone that the amplifier
outputs. Perhaps i could offset the lower volume / effect by using a 2x12 or even 4x12
cab and a mic on each speaker or something... or possibly switching to using condensor
mics instead... too many bloody options... i want my tooooone!!! Any comments
greatly appreciated!
|
Andi
Joined: 02/09/04
Posts: 1107
Loc: Berkshire, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: D@ve]
#64147 - 17/12/04 05:54 PM
|
|
|
Hi D@veI used a Harlequin for a while - that 6W was
very nearly loud enough to use on-stage and it sounded very nice. For home use it was
almost as unuseable as my Marshall 1/2 stack - way too loud. My valve amps
change sound as I turn them up or down, above about 5 or 6 on the volume control they
don't get louder, they just get thicker and more "elastic". With an attenuator they also
change as you turn them up or down. Everything interacts on a valve amp - every twist
changes the sound. To my ears attenuators sound good - if I'm running any of my
amps at any given SPL, I'd rather run the master where I want it for the sound quality
then attenuate for loudness. Is the sound identical to that without the
attenuator - don't know because the amps are so loud up close that my ears compress the
sound anyway. Does it work for recording - oh yes! Does it work on stage - oh yes! Does
it work at 2 in the morning with the kids asleep upstairs - pretty damned well - it's not
exact but then who are we kidding, I'm not REALLY Joe Perry either. I asked all
the "are you sure" questions, then I plugged a LP into a plexi through an attenuator and
just stopped asking.
-------------------- Andi, www.thedustbowl.net Mixing, Mastering, Audio Editing at The Dustbowl Audio
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#64194 - 17/12/04 08:13 PM
|
|
|
|
Many amps and guitar tones rely on power amp squash and so benefit from being run wide
open into an attenuator. But there are also many amps and guitar tones that rely on preamp
distortion alone. Seems to me the 6101 can be used either way.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|
BigRedX
Joined: 03/09/04
Posts: 203
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: Stvy]
#65472 - 21/12/04 04:26 PM
|
|
|
While speaker attunuators for valve amps can be a good idea remember that if the sound you
like is of the amp at almost full volume into something like a 4x12 cab a good deal of
that sound will be due to the speakers breaking up as well as pre- and power amp
distortion, which of course you won't get if you're attenuating the output to the
speakers. It all depends about how important the various aspects of the sound are to you
and you can't really know until you've explored the effect of changing each part of the
amplification chain. In the same way smaller amp/speaker combinations don't have the same
sound as a 100W Marshall (or whatever) head into 2 4x12 cabs, and the speaker in the
isolated box won't sound the same as a cab in a big room. You just have to experiment
until you find the right compromise for you. Having used both the Marshall
PowerBreak and the rack mounting SE100 version, I'd go for the cheaper Powerbreak as it
offers more individual stages of attenuation while the SE50 only has 3. If you need the
speaker simulation and DI capabilities of the SE100 have a look at a speaker simulation DI
unit like the Red Box
-------------------- RockinRollin' VampireMan
|
Shingles
active member
Joined: 10/03/03
Posts: 1081
Loc: Worcester, UK
|
Re: Valve Amp power Attenuators...
[Re: BigRedX]
#65833 - 22/12/04 04:11 PM
|
|
|
Quote SugarBox:
Having used
both the Marshall PowerBreak and the rack mounting SE100 version, I'd go for the cheaper
Powerbreak as it offers more individual stages of attenuation while the SE50 only has 3.
If you need the speaker simulation and DI capabilities of the SE100 have a look at a
speaker simulation DI unit like the Red Box
Thanks for the tip.
-------------------- Nik
Godin, Axon, Tonelab, Repeater & the skin of my teeth!
|