Young Angus
Kometose Tonologist
I could look this up on the net, but id rather hear what you guys have to say cos you usually put things in easier to understand ways 
				
			PUCKBOY99 said:Is that ENGL still not working out for you? That really is a shame, man.
Young Angus said:Cheers Lew, i got a bit out of that![]()
If only i understood things a little better...one day *sigh*
Lewguitar said:Do you want to know what it does or how it does it? Most people would say that it increases the highs but doesn't just boost them: it opens them up and makes them more lively.
The presence control is part of the negative feedback circuit of an amp.
After the guitar has been amplified by the preamp section of your amp (the small 12ax7 style tubes) a small part of that signal is taken, the phase reversed, and then reintroduced into the phase invertor/driver section...that's the Negative feedback circuit: the small out of phase signal.
That signal that is reintroduced is out of phase with the main audio signal and what it does is reduce distortion and tighten up the tone. It sort of "clamps down" on it and keeps the bass from getting flubby and makes the tone a little thinner...just like when you make a mistake instaling a pickup and accidently wire one out of phase so that when when you combine the two pickups the resulting tone is thin.
What the presence control does when you turn it up is send JUST the treble frequencies that are part of the negative feedback circuit to ground. The more you turn the presence control up the more treble from the negative feedback circuit is sent to ground and NOT reintroduced into the main audio signal.
Since those out of phase treble frequencies are now going to ground, they can't clamp down and dampen the primary treble frequencies of the main audio signal.
The result is that the main audio signal gets brighter and livlier.
And thats's how it works.![]()
Lew
Lewguitar said:Do you want to know what it does or how it does it? Most people would say that it increases the highs but doesn't just boost them: it opens them up and makes them more lively.
The presence control is part of the negative feedback circuit of an amp.
After the guitar has been amplified by the preamp section of your amp (the small 12ax7 style tubes) a small part of that signal is taken, the phase reversed, and then reintroduced into the phase invertor/driver section...that's the Negative feedback circuit: the small out of phase signal.
That signal that is reintroduced is out of phase with the main audio signal and what it does is reduce distortion and tighten up the tone. It sort of "clamps down" on it and keeps the bass from getting flubby and makes the tone a little thinner...just like when you make a mistake instaling a pickup and accidently wire one out of phase so that when when you combine the two pickups the resulting tone is thin.
What the presence control does when you turn it up is send JUST the treble frequencies that are part of the negative feedback circuit to ground. The more you turn the presence control up the more treble from the negative feedback circuit is sent to ground and NOT reintroduced into the main audio signal.
Since those out of phase treble frequencies are now going to ground, they can't clamp down and dampen the primary treble frequencies of the main audio signal.
The result is that the main audio signal gets brighter and livlier.
And thats's how it works.![]()
Lew