I read that but the fact that he said he was demonstrating the "RIGHT WAY" ruined it. That statement makes too many implications and, as I pointed out, was not the "right way." I'm not going to repeat what I already stated, but I'm pretty sure it's at least agreeable for the most part whether you like it or not. Hey, I wanted to like the demo but it didn't bring anything new to the table and I remain unimpressed due to my aforementioned points.
I understand what he means by saying the 'Right Way'. And i agree with him.
Regardless of the guitar and pick ups that was used . . .
. . . the SAME guitar, with the SAME pick ups, with the SAME cab and speakers was used for the demo, to eliminate as many variables as possible.
Makes the playing field (so to speak) as equal as possible.
Lets use sports cars as an example.
It is completely useless to say that X-Porsche is faster around a 3 mile race track than X-Ferrari, if X-Ferrari was driven on a completely different 3 mile race track.
Only when you put both sports cars on the SAME race track, with the same driver, and do individual time trails, then you can start to compare them.
In other words eliminate as many variables as possible.
Simple.
You're not catching all I'm saying.
The settings are not the same on each amp and therefore not the *right way* to do it. Same pickups, agreed.
Same cab, agreed. Same speaker, fine. However, there are a few things.
Someone said he might have used a tubscreamer.
I have many of them and can tell you they do alter the sound and aren't completely transparent.
They usually tighten the bass and affect the midrange.
Also, the higher a pedals level/vol is set the more it pushes the preamp doesn't it?
Back to EQ though. I have had amps with very active EQ controls, so adjusting one affects another.
I have had other amps that seem to only add to each frequency. These amps aren't set to a neutral setting.
They are dialed in to sound similar. Moreover, the mids are kind of scooped. Look at how high the presence is set.
It's almost all the way up on the Soldano. The bright switch is engaged on the 5150.
There's no bright switch to match on the Soldano. It's hard to tell but the bright switch looks off on the 5153.
What's the point of using the same guitar, speaker, etc... if you're going to dial the amps in differently?
These things, other than the aforementioned, are where I think the demo went wrong.
I see what he was TRYING to do but I don't agree that it was done *right*.
I totally agree with you on the tubescreamer thing.
Although, i have not read anywhere that the blog posting person did in fact use a pedal of any sort.
Afaik, the pedal thing is just an assumption - not fact.
Getting back to the EQ.
I can not see that it is a problem or even cheating.
I do not care that you have to crank the tone knobs wildly to get one amp to sound similar to another.
What it shows me is, that with enough knob twiddling, you can make amp X, sound like amp A.
And to me, that is all that matters.
If i buy an amp for $800.00, and all it takes is some tone knob adjustment, to make it sound very similar (not a carbon copy, but close) to a $4000.00 Holy Grail amp, then i am very happy.
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Also for what its worth that Soldano is a hotrod with SLO style knobs.
How are you able to tell it's a Hot Rod? I watched the video and didn't see any shots of the entire front panel of the amp. With the amps you're building you probably know them better than I do (I have played both) and I'm kinda curious how you determined which amp this is.
Regarding SLOs, Hot Rods, and lead circuits, they're supposed to be the same circuit but they sound different. I don't know if it's the custom OT or higher quality components, but SLOs have this amazing, cutting midrange that I just haven't heard in any other amp. I really wish I could get along with a Soldano (I've tried), but my personal sound seems to be a Marshall Jubilee.
The SLO has to be played stupid loud to really get the goods doesnt it??