Yngwiestein
New member
Call me crazy but gear that I have had for a number of years sounds better than the same thing new. Not only does it sound better but it seems to settle better on the settings I normally use. It's as if there is a burn where after warming up/cooling down, warming up/cooling down etc. the electronics start to break in.
I can't prove it except that gear I own for a long time sounds different than the exact same gear new. I would speculate if that is the appeal to vintage gear for most people who are into that sort of thing except that I would rather break in my own gear because it seems to settle in on the settings I use most often. I can only describe it as part of the gear mojo.
My JCM800 head took a few years to develop some sweet spots. Now it feels like the amp likes to settle in on those settings. My tube screamer is the same. I have tried new ones exactly the same and they don't sound the same. The knobs on my tube screamer stay around 11:30 except for the level which I keep on 1:00. On those settings my ages old tube screamer blooms nicely. I set my Les Paul tone controls down to 8 so now between 8-10 they have a sweet spot. I can plug in a new Les Paul and it will not sound broken in from 8-10 but more even across the tone range.
I want to know the physical reason why this happens to older gear and if there is a way to speed up the burn in of new gear.
I can't prove it except that gear I own for a long time sounds different than the exact same gear new. I would speculate if that is the appeal to vintage gear for most people who are into that sort of thing except that I would rather break in my own gear because it seems to settle in on the settings I use most often. I can only describe it as part of the gear mojo.
My JCM800 head took a few years to develop some sweet spots. Now it feels like the amp likes to settle in on those settings. My tube screamer is the same. I have tried new ones exactly the same and they don't sound the same. The knobs on my tube screamer stay around 11:30 except for the level which I keep on 1:00. On those settings my ages old tube screamer blooms nicely. I set my Les Paul tone controls down to 8 so now between 8-10 they have a sweet spot. I can plug in a new Les Paul and it will not sound broken in from 8-10 but more even across the tone range.
I want to know the physical reason why this happens to older gear and if there is a way to speed up the burn in of new gear.