If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

I think knowing your tone and what makes it allows you to dial it in. I know what I like and can dial it in pretty quickly on any amp. It may have something that I can't change (tightness, sponginess, etc), which is an inherent character of the amp that would make me choose a different amp. But knowing the tone in your head and what it needs (ie more mids, less bass, whatever), allows you to dial it in much quicker. Also, the concept of how amplifier EQs work and interact makes it much easier.

Rivera Knucklehead Reverb:
I sat down with a used Rivera Knucklehead Reverb at GC a month ago, and the tone was terrible. It was muddy, thick, muffled, no definition, no mids/treble, etc. Just everything I hate and couldn't tweak it to an acceptable sound. So I shut it down, turned everything to zero, and checked the impedance (which was set incorrectly; 2nd high-end amp at GC that has been set incorrectly when I check it). Anyway, I fire it back up, turn the gain to noon, and adjust the EQ by sound. Ends up bass is way less than a traditional amp, the presence is higher, etc. Slowly add gain until I'm satisfied, which is lower than normal since this amp is super high-gain. In the end, the tone was rocking. The GC sales guy came it and was amazed. Said they all thought it was broke when they got it because they couldn't get an acceptable sound out of it. I told him it is pretty good and would be even better on a cab without G12-T75s. He had no idea what I meant by a dark speaker, but said let's hook it up to this VHT cab. The amp that was rocking became amazing and blew us both completely away. I should have bought it, but thought I'd think about it. I went back a week later and it was gone.

Point is, they couldn't figure out the EQ, which is complicated on the Knucklehead, and thus couldn't sell it. Me spending 15 minutes to understand how the EQ worked and thus dialing it in made it sound unworldly and sold instantly. Even on the forums, the Knucklehead Reverb is labeled a "dark" amp, which when EQed correctly, is actually very Marshall-esque. It can definitely go more modern and dark, but the amp itself isn't necessarily like that.
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

^
They should have paid you commission!
:-p
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

I think there are two different kinds of tweaking - people who tweak when they know exactly what they want, and people who tweak to find "something better." The former is the ideal, and comes from intimate knowledge of the capabilities of your gear. The latter is often hopeless and unrewarding.
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

Tweakers' favorite sexual position? Doggy style, that way they both can look out the window. lol I tweak on my stuff depending on my surroundings, it's generally not much of a change. But I bought it so I'm going to mess with it until my heart's content.
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

I'll tweak something in a few minutes to find the sweet spots, then dial it in to be musical for what I'm using it for. Then, there's not much tweaking after that. On gear that's sensitive to knob changes, I cut little electrical tape triangles and stick them next to the knobs.

Surprisingly, I'm not much of a pickup tweaker/tinkerer. I have a good idea of what pickups I like, and once they're in a guitar they usually stay there. I only change something if I really don't like it.
 
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Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

My mesa has tons of options eq and gain wise. I usually can dial in a sound I am looking for in a minute or two though. IAt one point I had actually listed the amp for sale because it was frustrating trying to find sounds I liked. Once I read the manual a few times and worked with it a ton I can't think of an amp better suited for my needs.
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

I tweak to find the tone I'm 'hearing' for the song I'm working on... Which is precisely why I bought a Tweaker. *grin*

I don't always 'hear' the same voice, or even style of music, so finding one amp setting isn't going to happen.

Sent from my iPad using a bunch of electrons, copper, and probably some fiber optic cable
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

In my case, it's most likely that I don't know how to use it right. :boggled:
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

Gotta learn somehow.


Sent from my iPad using a bunch of electrons, copper, and probably some fiber optic cable
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

I'll tweak something in a few minutes to find the sweet spots, then dial it in to be musical for what I'm using it for. Then, there's not much tweaking after that. On gear that's sensitive to knob changes, I cut little electrical tape triangles and stick them next to the knobs.

Surprisingly, I'm not much of a pickup tweaker/tinkerer. I have a good idea of what pickups I like, and once they're in a guitar they usually stay there. I only change something if I really don't like it.

Sounds like we're very similar. I know what tones I'm going for and how to get them. I don't care about the other 150 tones/sounds that a piece of gear may be up to.

I am the anti-tweaker. When I find myself spending too much time tweaking settings, I get rid of the gear. I'm a RonCo "set it and forget it" kind of guy. That's why modelers and rack FX type units never stick around. I've had some awesome sounding units (11R and Kemper to name a few) and just got tired of fiddling with knobs. It doesn't matter anyways... because the moment I sit down with an amp I dial-up a nice, thick Marshall type tone with a very slight edge on top for the dirt, and/or a spanky Fender clean. So I more or less sound the same through every amp that ends up in my man cave (though some inspire me more than others).

In regards to FX... I'm the same way... I just dial-up the things that I usually want to hear and roll with those settings from then on. I like my reverbs, delays, and chorus very transparent/barely-there. I like my compressor very squished (cause I only use it for country leads ala Brad Paisley). I like my OD very transparent and more of a boost with hair. And I like my wah very lush, but non-tone-sucking.

Here's my current pedalboard and I really like it and don't feel like I'm missing much. (I like running it into the front end of slightly-hairy Marshall plexi type rigs --> NO loop usage). I could easily do without the Octaswitch, but after many years of tap-dancing on pedal boards... I really like the freedom of just hitting one or two switches when I change patches. Someday I'll spend the money on one of those switchers that Pete Thorn uses (they run like $750) just for the reduced size and MIDI switching ability.

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Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

Not so much anymore.

I just use a very stripped down set-up now so there's less to play around with.
Not always as much control over details, but I enjoy the simplicity.
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

It doesn't take me long at all to find the sound I'm after.
 
Re: If you Spend More Time Tweaking Your Gear Than Playing It...

Sort of has to do with ones pursuit of tone, which I find never ending fun. Having a vast versatile system is potential. Having little gear is limiting.
I find what I like to do is take a practice day and opt for different approaches to things. Adjust something totally different than I normally would, try some different stacking, change my board order around, helps break out of a rut and the same thing all the time. I think we all get sort of stuck in our personal adjustments for amps and pedals and we will immediately dial in something new pretty much the way we always use something. Helps to break out of that looped thinking pattern.
 
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