GonzoBananas wrote:
Now i've known tube amps sound better when they can breathe. However i have never witnessed this drastic of a change in such a small window, and also at significantly high volume on a small amp. Is everyone having the same experience with theirs? I'm wondering if it might have something to do with the speaker in this case? As i am using 65w creamback speaker, known to be stiff (mine is well broken in getting slammed by a 50w marshall, sometimes cranked). I'm wondering if despite being broken in, it might still be too stiff for the tramp when it isn't turned up.
Thoughts anyone?
I've tried mine through a handful of speakers and get noticeably different responses, including spots where everything aligns and jumps out a bit. Are you using a head or a cab?
fredg wrote:
With those tone settings, and the circuit un-modified, you have GOT to be using a Telecaster...otherwise, with humbuckers, that's a recipe for flabby bass and an almost unusable tone.
Without considering the cabinet, speaker, speaker number, impedance, room, and a dozen other variables, it's pretty hard to say "the dial on this spot always means this." I gig a good amount, and I can set up the exact same signal chain in 2 different rooms and find significantly different needs in where I put my knobs.
If I'm getting unusable tone, I change a whole lot of other things before I say "it's the circuit's fault." The first thing I'd change is how I play it. It's a different tool than I've had before, and likely requires a completely different touch to bring out what's special about it. If I'm not into the bass, I'll try a different speaker (I'm lucky enough to have some 2 speaker cabinets and I feel like they handle the larger wavelengths of bass signals in a way that delivers real richness that's difficult to get from a single speaker that's suitable for guitar.)