......I could buy an ABY switch and rout my Lovepedal Les Lius into the normal channel and switch between the two channels. What say all my expert friends here?
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Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........Or...
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
It's easy to tweed up your normal channel. Is this a PCB amp or a tag board?
Of course, you can still run the ABY pedal and do the tweed as well.
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
Originally posted by Scott_F View PostIt's easy to tweed up your normal channel. Is this a PCB amp or a tag board?
To a lot of players "Tweed" means a CF into the tone stack. You will not be able to do that with any ease. But you CAN bump the mids and increase the plate resistor value. That will make a Noticeable Difference. You can convert (if it has one) the bright switch into a Cathode/Gain boost switch with not much trouble.
All this will be much easier if this is a hand-wired Fender. They have so many New/Old names now, not sure if Fender "reissued" the Band Master.
bestLast edited by zzmoore; 12-25-2015, 07:10 PM.
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
Thanks guys. My Bandmaster Reverb is a drip-edge which should be a 1968 or 1969 so the amp has a tag board. I wouldn't mind converting the normal channel to a tweed deluxe circuit (two individual volumes for each input and a single tone control) What would that sound like?
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
Originally posted by Jeffblue View PostThanks guys. My Bandmaster Reverb is a drip-edge which should be a 1968 or 1969 so the amp has a tag board. I wouldn't mind converting the normal channel to a tweed deluxe circuit (two individual volumes for each input and a single tone control) What would that sound like?
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
Originally posted by Lake Placid Blues View PostA common and simple mod to make it more tweed like is by changing the slope resistor of the associated channel's tone stack to 56k. Easy if its a tag board. Kinda a pain if its PCB.
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
Hey if it's a non modified drip edge, just leave it stock. I truly believe you'll thank me one day.
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
i understand what scott is saying and there is wisdom there. but as a man who has thoroughly messed with a '66 deluxe reverb and a '69 dual showman reverb i say go for it. my deluxe has the normal channel gutted so there is no tone controls, only a cap to shelve up the bass so it isnt farty. i use an a/b switch to go from clean mid scooped reverb to fat crunchy dry
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
Well, so far, all of what "we" have suggested is easily restored.....pretty much just value changes...maybe some wire rerouting and also (perhaps) adding a component or two. Nothing suggested to this point would alter the chassis or face-plate.
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
Well I say that as I look across the room at a drip edge Pro Reverb that I changed out a huge number of parts on. But I had CC resistors that were crumbling and once I got started, it was hard to stop.
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
Originally posted by Scott_F View PostHey if it's a non modified drip edge, just leave it stock. I truly believe you'll thank me one day.
Re: tweed tho. I reckon the most defining "tweed" characteristic is the saggy drive sound produced by 5e3 deluxes. The lions share of this tone comes from the fact that the phase inverter is overdriving. Once fender started using the "long tailed pair" configuration for the PI, that sound was gone, replaced by a much punchier and much cleaner and more defined sound. Your drip edge will never get that same sound of the phase inverter crapping out. That is fine. You have a great amp in its own right.
If i was in your shoes, the best thing to do would be to make sure the amp is doing what it was designed to do in the best manner possible (ie: strong tubes, fresh caps, nie clen solder joins etc) then find the perfect spasker for the job (texas heat is really hard to beat for that kind of amp) and experiment with getting the perfect overdrive pedal to pair with it. The les lius is pretty good and it does do that saggy thing very well. You might find that the xotic AC is killer if you want a bit more punch, clarity, firmness, low end and flexibility.
Hope this is useful."Technique is really the elimination of the unneccessary ... it is a constant effort to avoid any personal impediment or obstacle to acheive the smooth flow of energy and intent"
Yehudi Menuhin
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
right, you cant really "tweed" your bf/sf amp. there are too many things that are different to get very close to a tweed type tone. you can however make the normal channel a fatter crunchy beast. i cant recall exactly what i did but i know i removed the tone stack, shelved up the bass, increased the cathode resistor on the first stage, lowered the cathode bypass cap on the second stage... ill have to take a look.
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Re: Considered Tweedifying The Normal Channel On My Fender Bandmaster Reverb........O
swapping out the tone caps to .022 uf help a lot as well.
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