I dont understand full stacks

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Re: I dont understand full stacks

As mentioned, positioning makes a big difference. Standing directly in front of a quad cab lets you hear really high treble frequencies which can't be heard from an angle. I encountered someone on a different forum who said he likes to daisy chain a bunch of 1x12s and spread them out around the stage facing different directions.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

It's crap like this that makes me ashamed to be a guitarist sometimes.

You quoted me out of context. I was replying to comments about Sunn O))) and Stoner Rock in general, which are music that requires a bottom heavy guitar tone, which you won't get out of some p*ssy 2x12.....

I suppose you could pull it off with a 2x12 if you had too.... but it'd suck in context to a full stack.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

Back in the late 90's and early 21th century, I play the overseas music circuit in the far east and Holland.

Due to shipping/airline fees, we were always looking for cheaper ways to get our gear to locations and use as much of the house PA (Which almost always sucked).

I tried POD (No), Combination, programable pedals (No), small Mesa Boogies (Mark IV, DC-3, DC5, and DC-10) (No), Bassman, Twins, Bandmasters - Almost), Marshalls Cabinets / Heads (JTM's) (Loved the tone, but always too costly to keep shipping), and finally settled for a custom build amp.

Started playing Marshall bluesbreaker amps (Own vintage, modified RI, and am in the process of building a Ceriatone - without their transformers clone of the JTM-45)

Since then I have given away two amps to SD forum members, sold some gear, purchased some gear (Most notably - Celtics) and newer RI's.

Out of all these amps, I like the Marshall tone best for rock and Fender tweed for blues.

Favorite amp - Holland 'Little Jimi'.
Favorite music - JH & SRV, with a little ZZ just for fun.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

You quoted me out of context. I was replying to comments about Sunn O))) and Stoner Rock in general, which are music that requires a bottom heavy guitar tone, which you won't get out of some p*ssy 2x12.....

I suppose you could pull it off with a 2x12 if you had too.... but it'd suck in context to a full stack.

i dont know i like some bass and i use a 2x12 that i built and i think the bass gets abit heavy past 4
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

I disagree. Heavy metal is one of the most creative genres I know of, after hip-hop and punk rock.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

i dont know i like some bass and i use a 2x12 that i built and i think the bass gets abit heavy past 4

I find 2x12's force me to turn the amp's bass up higher than is optimal, causing the overall tone to muddy up somewhat. A 4x12 lets me keep the bass knob set to a lower level while still achieving more overall bottom end than a 2x12 gives me.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

I couldn't live without my 4x12'' - it sounds like God. It has so much depth and power that makes anything smaller sound anemic.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

I love stacks, but!

Is it possible that, if you need LOADS of Bass or to that matter Treble, it may be an indication that you may have already suffered damage to you ears on one of those frequencies?

Only I have a stack on my wish list but, I like to hear!... I guess earplugs are the answer.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

It's crap like this that makes me ashamed to be a guitarist sometimes.

I think you misunderstood, maybe re-phrased as:

"all of which is music that requires a bottom heavy tone"

it makes more sense across the wires. I'm pretty sure that's what screamingdaisy meant, he's not one to make uneducated generalisations.

The likes of sunn really do require pretty hefty amplification to achieve their sound.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

A pair of testicles?


Seriously tho, you're right. While completely badass, stacks aren't exactly practical. They're actually pretty rare these days. I can't remember going to any shows recently where they had more than 2 half stacks per side.

They have never worked for me as I have had pa's and am a nobody so I do not play arenas. I am way more into small amps.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

This is why you need a stack!!


If I were to do that I would actually need ...

abulance_img.jpg
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

Not sure if this has been mentioned but even if a 2x12 could sound like a full stack it limits your speaker options especially if you are running a cranked 100 watter. Take for example a greenback or G12H-30 the two classic speakers for vintage marshalls could not handle the clean power of a 100W plexi mind when its cranked where it exceeds this. Sure higher output speakers exist but they don't have the same tone as lower wattage speakers not better or worse just different.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

That's a good point James. I jammed with a kid about a year ago who was a really good guitarist, but was running a Marshall DSL100 into a 2x12 cab. He said if he turns it up past 3 the speakers will overload because they could only handle like 60 watts tops...so it's like, why even have a 100 watt head?
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

The only time i was totally satisfied with my tone was when I was running my bassman into two 4x12s and jumping the channels into a 200watt Peavey bass combo with a 15" in there. The tone was huge, warm, and enveloped everything around it.

For me, the only time i was totally satisfied with my tone was the one time I gigged with a buddy's Mesa 4x12. It was powered by just a Crate solid-state combo, but it was huge and satisfying in a very different way than a 2x12 or a miked cab - even without miking or cranking the amp. The mix sounded a ton better, it was easier to hear myself amongst my bandmates, it was very cool. This was even without monitors or anything in the PA but vocals and horns.
 
Re: I dont understand full stacks

The only time i was totally satisfied with my tone was when I was running my bassman into two 4x12s and jumping the channels into a 200watt Peavey bass combo with a 15" in there. The tone was huge, warm, and enveloped everything around it.

I like your description. :friday:

For me, the only time i was totally satisfied with my tone was the one time I gigged with a buddy's Mesa 4x12. It was powered by just a Crate solid-state combo, but it was huge and satisfying in a very different way than a 2x12 or a miked cab - even without miking or cranking the amp. The mix sounded a ton better, it was easier to hear myself amongst my bandmates, it was very cool. This was even without monitors or anything in the PA but vocals and horns.
 
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