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Treble bleed and fuzz?

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  • jeremy
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    as with most things, everything in the chain makes a difference and the 1st gen of dirt boxes are very particular in what they see, both before and after. glad you got it workin so easily

    Leave a comment:


  • FAC
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    Thanks for the input everyone. I ended up clipping the treble bleed (which was super easy...just clipped one leg and taped it off, so it is still in there if I ever want to hook it back up). I am happy...works much better with the treble booster, and also much better with the fuzz face-like pedal. I know lots of folks like them and the circuit works for them, but I'm happy without it for my setup.

    Leave a comment:


  • jeremy
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    treble bleeds are fine in many circumstances but the interaction with these old style pedals isnt great from my experience. a germanium fuzzface for example only sounds its best with a heavy duty battery (not power supply or alkaline battery) and must be first inline after the guitar. id go further and say that it sounds best with low output bright single coils over anything else but that is more open to taste. they are cantankerous pedals, at least in some part due to the super low input impedance. that said, the issue with the treble bleed is that the extra highend you retain as you roll down the volume on the guitar reacts weirdly with these super simple circuits. im not an ee so cant explain it other than ive seen/heard it personally so many times to believe that its true

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  • Zombiwoof
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    A proper treble bleed should be un-noticeable and the treble retention should sound natural, if you experiment with different cap/resistor values to find the best combination. If you just throw in a stock treble bleed, it may or may not roll off too much or not enough treble as you turn down. The people that hate treble bleeds probably just put in some stock value without experimenting to find the optimum component values.
    Al

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  • jeremy
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    treble boosts can thin things out and be pretty damn harsh into a clean amp but a drive pedal in between can make a big difference as fac says. if your little ss amp is overdriving then it might sound fine without a dirt box between. they were originally used between the guitar and a cranked tube amp to push the preamp harder, add its own bit of germanium dirt, cut the flubby bottom that many cranked tube amps exhibit

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  • FAC
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    Originally posted by Francois View Post
    Hey ! A Beano boost question (I'd like to get one).

    As a Treble Booster I suppose it's great if you are using a Tube Amp (at the practise place).
    But how does it sound with a small solid state amp at home ?
    ... not made for that... But then it is crappy ?

    And any love for the Catalinbread Naga Viper (which, I think, does not have a Ge transistor as the Analog.Man) ?
    Not sure how it would sound into a solid state amp at home, but it works well stacked into some drive pedals and then into a clean amp, where the pedal sort of takes the place of the overdriven amp in that scenario. That is actually how I use the Beano Boost most of the time. I have had success running it into ZVEX Distortron and Greer Lightspeed...I suspect it would not do as well if the drive pedal overemphasized the mid frequencies.

    Leave a comment:


  • Francois
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    Hey ! A Beano boost question (I'd like to get one).

    As a Treble Booster I suppose it's great if you are using a Tube Amp (at the practise place).
    But how does it sound with a small solid state amp at home ?
    ... not made for that... But then it is crappy ?

    And any love for the Catalinbread Naga Viper (which, I think, does not have a Ge transistor as the Analog.Man) ?

    Leave a comment:


  • Gtrjunior
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    Originally posted by FAC View Post
    To clarify...with GE treble booster engaged, it does sound "normal" when the guitar volume is on 10 (but I rarely use it that way). When I roll the guitar volume down, it sounds tinny on the guitar with the treble bleed mod. On all of my other guitars, when I roll the guitar volume down, it cleans up and gives a really very nice cleanish tone that I am now missing on this new guitar.

    Thanks.
    I’d just go in and snip it out. It will take more time to remove the cover than to snip it.
    Go for it !!!

    Leave a comment:


  • ehdwuld
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    My buddy had the same experience with the treble bleed we put on his
    He removed it
    And the condition remained

    But just lift one leg of the bleed and see if that's what you want

    I have it on some of my guitars
    Not all
    Because I'm just too lazy to do it

    Leave a comment:


  • FAC
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    Originally posted by FAC View Post
    Folks,

    A recently purchased guitar came with a treble bleed mod installed. I noticed that the clean-up I usually get with my treble booster (Beano Boost) is very different with the new guitar vs. my others (without treble bleed mods)...as in, not really usable. I searched a bit on the forum but figured I would just ask...is this a known issue with treble bleed mods, that they may not play well with things like fuzz faces and treble boosters?

    Thanks!
    To clarify...with GE treble booster engaged, it does sound "normal" when the guitar volume is on 10 (but I rarely use it that way). When I roll the guitar volume down, it sounds tinny on the guitar with the treble bleed mod. On all of my other guitars, when I roll the guitar volume down, it cleans up and gives a really very nice cleanish tone that I am now missing on this new guitar.

    Thanks.

    Leave a comment:


  • Gtrjunior
    replied
    Treble bleed and fuzz?

    Originally posted by dystrust View Post
    +1

    I hear it more as piercing than nasal, but I hate it regardless. I much prefer 50s wiring as a solution to the treble loss issue, and I like how the volume and tone knobs become more interactive. It's blasphemy for some, but I even have my Strat and Tele wired that way.
    That’s exactly what I did with the LP. 50’s wiring all day long.

    Leave a comment:


  • dystrust
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    Originally posted by Gtrjunior View Post
    I’ve never heard that they may jive with certain gear....that may be possible but I’ve never heard that.
    I have noticed that it can cause a nasal thin sound as you roll down the volume which I personally don’t care for. I had one in a LP a while back and simply snipped it out of the circuit. Problem solved.
    +1

    I hear it more as piercing than nasal, but I hate it regardless. I much prefer 50s wiring as a solution to the treble loss issue, and I like how the volume and tone knobs become more interactive. It's blasphemy for some, but I even have my Strat and Tele wired that way.

    Leave a comment:


  • FAC
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    Originally posted by jeremy View Post
    ive noticed treble bleeds dont work well with my sunface or treble booster so i think it may be characteristic of the simple circuits. the clean up is one reason i love those pedals
    Same with me...generally, the main time I am doing the "cleanup thing" is with the Beano Boost/Sun Lion, not with my amp alone...thinking of removing the treble bleed circuit and seeing what happens.

    Leave a comment:


  • jeremy
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    ive noticed treble bleeds dont work well with my sunface or treble booster so i think it may be characteristic of the simple circuits. the clean up is one reason i love those pedals

    Leave a comment:


  • Gtrjunior
    replied
    Re: Treble bleed and fuzz?

    I’ve never heard that they may jive with certain gear....that may be possible but I’ve never heard that.
    I have noticed that it can cause a nasal thin sound as you roll down the volume which I personally don’t care for. I had one in a LP a while back and simply snipped it out of the circuit. Problem solved.

    Leave a comment:

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