Hi all,
Do tube amps pick up loud EMF signals and amplify them?
Thought I'd put a question to all you very knowledgeable people out there. I play in church about 10 feet in front of a bunch of transformers that control the house lights. The EMF is bad, across the whole spectrum, causing things to buzz. The designers regret having done that, but that is the way life is. After I finally found pickups that are completely noiseless, I have continued to play through my boss GT-3 and with an assortment of external overdrive pedals. The sound is good, but now that my playing is improved and I am playing a lot more leads and fills, I'd like to get a more realistic amp sound than 6-7 year old technology has to offer.
So tube amp? I've heard that tube amps also pick up EMF signals very readily. Neon lights are the closest things simulation to this, I guess, so I want to ask you tube amp players if this might/will be a problem. The other solution is to get more realistic amp simulation, e.g., a line 6 product like the POD xt Live, that will give me the "gwwahhh" type sound on a Marshall or Matchless amp model.
Thanks for any advice you can give.
Joe
Do tube amps pick up loud EMF signals and amplify them?
Thought I'd put a question to all you very knowledgeable people out there. I play in church about 10 feet in front of a bunch of transformers that control the house lights. The EMF is bad, across the whole spectrum, causing things to buzz. The designers regret having done that, but that is the way life is. After I finally found pickups that are completely noiseless, I have continued to play through my boss GT-3 and with an assortment of external overdrive pedals. The sound is good, but now that my playing is improved and I am playing a lot more leads and fills, I'd like to get a more realistic amp sound than 6-7 year old technology has to offer.
So tube amp? I've heard that tube amps also pick up EMF signals very readily. Neon lights are the closest things simulation to this, I guess, so I want to ask you tube amp players if this might/will be a problem. The other solution is to get more realistic amp simulation, e.g., a line 6 product like the POD xt Live, that will give me the "gwwahhh" type sound on a Marshall or Matchless amp model.
Thanks for any advice you can give.
Joe
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