wahwah
GumbyLoveologist
Re: Attention Night Train owners / Tube gurus
That would be the expected result from a vintage GE in a British voiced amp. They have a hardness in their top end presence without the warmth of an RCA to balance it out. The difference with the Mullard is that it has a smoother, sweeter top end, which has the effect of accentuating the midrange frequencies below it. As stated before, this is actually an inefficiency in the Mullard, but it is one of those cases where a technical deficiency turns out to be an extremely musical one. It means that less compensation has to happen in the tone network, because the preamp tube is doing its own tone shaping.
Interestingly, a Mullard sounds decidedly small in an American voiced amp, particularly compared to a 50's RCA or early Tung Sol. I think this is one of the major contributing factors as to why the early Marshalls sounded so different to the Bassman circuits on which they were based.
Cheers..................................... wahwah
mine's a bright tube with a lot of definition. With the strat bridge position, in bright mode with the gain up and master down, I have to roll the treble back down somewhere if I'm gonna use its but with past bedroom level the icepick mellows out nicely
That would be the expected result from a vintage GE in a British voiced amp. They have a hardness in their top end presence without the warmth of an RCA to balance it out. The difference with the Mullard is that it has a smoother, sweeter top end, which has the effect of accentuating the midrange frequencies below it. As stated before, this is actually an inefficiency in the Mullard, but it is one of those cases where a technical deficiency turns out to be an extremely musical one. It means that less compensation has to happen in the tone network, because the preamp tube is doing its own tone shaping.
Interestingly, a Mullard sounds decidedly small in an American voiced amp, particularly compared to a 50's RCA or early Tung Sol. I think this is one of the major contributing factors as to why the early Marshalls sounded so different to the Bassman circuits on which they were based.
Cheers..................................... wahwah