UberMetalDood
New member
First my disclaimer. The sound sample you are about to listen to is very rough. All I did was record the first few minutes after powering on my new Powerball II. I went through a small variety of sounds. I am not trying to show off technique or even trying to sound good. It is simply the first ten minutes or so of powering on my amp.
I tried to make my review as professional as I could even though I am far from professional. I think you will find it well organized for your reading pleasure. Please enjoy.
Part 1: Rhythm channel 1/2 gain
Part 2: Crunch channel + Maxon OD820
Part 3: Crunch channel light gain
Part 4: Clean channel
Guitars: Carvin cs4 + Dimarzio Paf36 bridge + neck
I think reviews are more much more helpful with an accompanying sound sample so without further ado.
http://soundclick.com/share?songid=9239048
Price Paid: $2000
Unpacking
The box arrived in perfect condition via FedEx. Packaging was first class. A neat little niche molded in the center of the symmetric foam inserts held the power cord and two boxed preamp tubes wrapped with bubble wrap. So far everything is perfect.
The amp
The head is a modest size. It is not as big as it looked in the pictures and only about 40 lbs. Its built solid as a rock. The new black face and wire mesh in the front looks brutal with the quad 6L6's glowing red behind it. The layout is simple. No need to read the manual to start using it so I didnt read the manual until after writing this review.
The Channels
Settings: 1/2 gain, 1/2 EQ, MV 1/3, CV 2/3
Clean: I expected an immaculate clean channel but even with PAF pickups I was getting a fair amount of hair with the gain set 1/2. Roll off the volume knob 2 ticks and it cleaned up. The clean channel reminds me of a loud Fender. Turned the gain down to 1/3 and it was fairly clean with max volume. I switched to a Jackson with a Super Distortion bridge to see if it would push the clean channel but it stayed pretty clean.
I dont know if they designed the amp with high output pickups in mind but one peculiar thing is that using a high output pickup does not seem to push the amp any harder than low output pickups. I like this feature because no gain adjustment is necessary when using hotter pickups.
Crunch: This channel can do so much it is ridiculous. I can tell you right now the Powerball II is a cross between a Soldano SLO and a Fryette Ultra Lead. It actually sounds like that and plays sensitive like an SLO and ultra tight like a VHT. You have to keep your technique in check for sure. At this point the best way to describe the Powerball 2 is like an Solano SLO an Fryette having offspring.
I liken the crunch channel to an SLO. It is bright and has a fair amount of gain available. My sound clip has a couple of segments where I used a light OD on crunch channel with 1/2 gain. I struggled at first then realized the EQ is very sensitive. A little tweak here or there makes a big difference.
Clean and Crunch are on channel 1. Every control is accessible from the front except the noisegate. Channel 1 has 2 treble controls. In addition there is a bright and bottom boost switch.
Rhythm: Not as bright as crunch and a lot of gain available. Enough gain for rhythms and lead playing. Rhythm and Lead are on channel 2. Channel 2 has 2 mid controls. In addition there is a mid boost. This channel is warm, bright, crunchy, tight, saturated. A really good variety possible here.
Lead: I dont know what to do with this channel yet. It is almost over the top because the rhythm channel has enough gain. I will have to tell you more about it later. It is voiced a little different and I think the main difference between it and the rhythm channel is the rhythm channel has more emphasis in the lower mids and the lead channel has more emphasis in the upper mids. It is hard to tell at this point having had the head for only a few hours.
The Controls:
2 Channels and 4 modes.
Channel 1: Clean + Crunch
Channel 2: Rhythm + Lead
Channel 1 EQ: Bass, Middle, Treble 1, Treble 2
Channel 2 EQ: Bass, Middle 1, Middle 2, Treble
Channel 1 Vol: Clean gain, crunch gain, channel vol, master vol
Channel 2 Vol: Rhythm gain, lead gain, channel vol, master vol
Various boosts include bright, mid, and deep
Additional controls: Presence, Depth/Punch
Noisegate
I grabbed my Jackson again, switched to the lead channel, and turned the gain all up. The amp was quiet. The noisegate seemed to have no effect. I used my coil taps and it got noisy. Still the noisegate was useless even maxed out. There is possibly something wrong with it. At this point I dont even know why they would put it because it stays fairly quiet.
I tried to make my review as professional as I could even though I am far from professional. I think you will find it well organized for your reading pleasure. Please enjoy.
Part 1: Rhythm channel 1/2 gain
Part 2: Crunch channel + Maxon OD820
Part 3: Crunch channel light gain
Part 4: Clean channel
Guitars: Carvin cs4 + Dimarzio Paf36 bridge + neck
I think reviews are more much more helpful with an accompanying sound sample so without further ado.
http://soundclick.com/share?songid=9239048
Price Paid: $2000
Unpacking
The box arrived in perfect condition via FedEx. Packaging was first class. A neat little niche molded in the center of the symmetric foam inserts held the power cord and two boxed preamp tubes wrapped with bubble wrap. So far everything is perfect.
The amp
The head is a modest size. It is not as big as it looked in the pictures and only about 40 lbs. Its built solid as a rock. The new black face and wire mesh in the front looks brutal with the quad 6L6's glowing red behind it. The layout is simple. No need to read the manual to start using it so I didnt read the manual until after writing this review.
The Channels
Settings: 1/2 gain, 1/2 EQ, MV 1/3, CV 2/3
Clean: I expected an immaculate clean channel but even with PAF pickups I was getting a fair amount of hair with the gain set 1/2. Roll off the volume knob 2 ticks and it cleaned up. The clean channel reminds me of a loud Fender. Turned the gain down to 1/3 and it was fairly clean with max volume. I switched to a Jackson with a Super Distortion bridge to see if it would push the clean channel but it stayed pretty clean.
I dont know if they designed the amp with high output pickups in mind but one peculiar thing is that using a high output pickup does not seem to push the amp any harder than low output pickups. I like this feature because no gain adjustment is necessary when using hotter pickups.
Crunch: This channel can do so much it is ridiculous. I can tell you right now the Powerball II is a cross between a Soldano SLO and a Fryette Ultra Lead. It actually sounds like that and plays sensitive like an SLO and ultra tight like a VHT. You have to keep your technique in check for sure. At this point the best way to describe the Powerball 2 is like an Solano SLO an Fryette having offspring.
I liken the crunch channel to an SLO. It is bright and has a fair amount of gain available. My sound clip has a couple of segments where I used a light OD on crunch channel with 1/2 gain. I struggled at first then realized the EQ is very sensitive. A little tweak here or there makes a big difference.
Clean and Crunch are on channel 1. Every control is accessible from the front except the noisegate. Channel 1 has 2 treble controls. In addition there is a bright and bottom boost switch.
Rhythm: Not as bright as crunch and a lot of gain available. Enough gain for rhythms and lead playing. Rhythm and Lead are on channel 2. Channel 2 has 2 mid controls. In addition there is a mid boost. This channel is warm, bright, crunchy, tight, saturated. A really good variety possible here.
Lead: I dont know what to do with this channel yet. It is almost over the top because the rhythm channel has enough gain. I will have to tell you more about it later. It is voiced a little different and I think the main difference between it and the rhythm channel is the rhythm channel has more emphasis in the lower mids and the lead channel has more emphasis in the upper mids. It is hard to tell at this point having had the head for only a few hours.
The Controls:
2 Channels and 4 modes.
Channel 1: Clean + Crunch
Channel 2: Rhythm + Lead
Channel 1 EQ: Bass, Middle, Treble 1, Treble 2
Channel 2 EQ: Bass, Middle 1, Middle 2, Treble
Channel 1 Vol: Clean gain, crunch gain, channel vol, master vol
Channel 2 Vol: Rhythm gain, lead gain, channel vol, master vol
Various boosts include bright, mid, and deep
Additional controls: Presence, Depth/Punch
Noisegate
I grabbed my Jackson again, switched to the lead channel, and turned the gain all up. The amp was quiet. The noisegate seemed to have no effect. I used my coil taps and it got noisy. Still the noisegate was useless even maxed out. There is possibly something wrong with it. At this point I dont even know why they would put it because it stays fairly quiet.
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