I'm a bit of a Gilmour freak which is why I built my TriWatt in the first place - I knew that I wanted a Hiwatt for that big punchy sound. The Triwatt gives it on spades for sure, but I've been on a quest to find the perfect overdrive to give me that "Pulse" sound - huge, fat, and rich in harmonics. The Triwatt with a nice analog delay and a bit of reverb is pure Gilmour with a Strat but the overdrive sound has been a bit more elusive.
I have a Strat with the EMG DG-20 setup that sounds and plays great. It's a Mexican, but it easily the equal of any American Strat after the EMGs and a Callaham bridge. After a pro setup it plays like a custom shop. So the guitar end is nailed down.
I've gone through about 1.2 zillion Big Muff Pi's trying to find the Gilmour sound. All of them sounds just "ok". I built the BYOC Large Beaver and while it sounds like the best Muff I've ever played it still didn't sound fundamentally like Gilmour. Yeah I know you've got to have his hands (god I wish) but I just couldn't get the tone in the right ballpark. It was always just to muddy and undefined - which is the exact opposite of Gilmour. Something was missing - definition and shimmer.
But I think I found the secret tonight. I stuck a Boss SD-1 ($20 Criaglist special) in front of it and dialed the gain way down to just a hint of crunch. I hit put the BYOC Large beaver behind it in flat mids mode, cranked up the gain, and WHAM there it was - pure harmonic bliss. Holy crap what a tone!! A bit of delay and my trusty CE-2 through my Trademark 60 on the left side in stereo and I felt like I was on the stage. I can't play worth a crap but I could just grab one note and hold it forever.
If you have a Muff and a Triwatt you've got to try this. I think you'll be pleasently surprised.
Of course you've probably all been doing this for years and I'm just the retarded guy that didn't get the message though
