Re: NAD - It Might Get Loud
I like the look of that - has everything I'd need in an amp i.e. two channels each with gain and volume and their own EQ. How does it sound ? What are the differences between the channels ?
Thank you sir! I like the look of it too... very clean and no-nonsense, almost like a piece of military hardware. The amp is a Custom Audio Amplifiers OD100SE/SH, built by John Suhr a stone's throw away from me in Lake Elsinore, California. It's a 100W all-tube head, six 12AX7's in the preamp and four 5881's in the power section.
This replaced the Boogie I'm selling, and it's sort of a return to a format of amp I really like - two channels with a few options, a good effects loop, and not a whole lot else. Each channel has a bright switch and a gain boost, and the back panel has Feedback (makes the amp tighter or looser feeling, basically a damping control) and Presence controls. The brilliance control on the front panel is not a presence control; it sounds different when it's adjusted. It makes the amp a bit brighter but it also adds some shimmer overall to the amp as a whole and the tone seems less "dry" with it up.
There's also a "Whomp" switch on the back - it's a 3-way switch that adds +4 or +2 db of low end boost, or you can turn it off. It's great for playing at lower levels or thickening up a bright instrument. Even with the back panel stuff there's not half as many options as on my Boogie and I like it that way.
How does it sound? Simple answer: vintage Fender Cleans, modern American Drive, but that really sells it short. The SH in the model name denotes the Scott Henderson mod, which John doesn't do anymore. It's supposed to emulate an old Blackface Fender type of tone, with a tad darker sound and earlier breakup than the stock amp. The amp is so quiet when it's idling and there's no reverb so it's a bit unnerving when you first play it, but the clean tone is very thick and rich. This amp LOVES single coils on the clean channel.
The drive channel has the SE mod on it, which is more gain than the standard OD100 which was more like a 70's Marshall, but not as much as the SE+ that's currently available. Honestly I wouldn't know what to do with more gain than what this has, and Im still planning on using my Fat Boost to further tweak the gain coming in from the guitar but also the feel as well. the amp sounds best between 3 and 6 which is LOUD LOUD LOUD but it does sound good at bedroom levels too interestingly enough - not fizzy at all. I will need an attenuator to run this in a club though. I can also run it in half-power by pulling the two outer tubes and halving the ohm output (i.e. 8 into 16) It'll do classic rock and heavy blues quite well on lower gain settings, and then move into a good singing Marshally drive sound, and then past 7 it gets very Soldano like. Absolutely CRUSHES when you go into Drop D and start playing heavy stuff.
The amp is really reactive to what you feed into it, both from the instrument and the player. It's very touch-reactive; play well and you will be rewarded. Play poorly and you will be punished, this thing does not gloss over your mistakes. My Music Man, LTD, and my friend's Tele and SG all sounded radically different but all sounded GOOD nonetheless - the amp loves pedals too, it's got an excellent effects loop and it likes drive pedals and even some delays and mods up front as well!
I first played one of these in 2005 and never forgot it... now I own one and after playing with Bogners and Boogies for a while, and it's nice to come back to a clean, unfettered amp that's just about pure, beautiful tone. I really do hope it works out for the long run, I have a feeling it will.