everdrone
New member
Re: Who's played an Orange Thunderverb 50 at low volumes?
sorry for the delay in my response - I see your thread - I think it is the best amp ever for me and that I need the 50 watts for the low end response and 30watts would not really be acceptable for my application.
I have never used the amp in my apartment though, I have really cranky neighbors so I am not much help, I am sure the sound would be acceptable at tv volume levels, I would worry about doing that constantly though in terms of wear and tear as it is a REALLY LOUD AMP. prolly not the greatest tone doing that.
sorry I am not much help, cheers on the TV awesomest amp ever, lots have it at the orange forum they may be able to help, just label it clearly in your title so they know exactly what your question is, many TV threads there
note: TV does not have an attenuator. it is
The Thunderverb has two global controls, one for reverb and the other for the amp's built-in attenuator. You can use this last one very effectively to get a decent cranked sound at lower volumes - it's best described as a post-master volume and getting back to those twists we mentioned, the attenuator control works backwards compared to a regular volume control, reducing output levels as it's turned clockwise.
The attenuator control is very cool: it acts on both channels simultaneously to lower the postmaster volume signal and reduces output as you turn it clockwise. With the attenuator set almost fully 'up' (turned clockwise), you can get realistic cranked amp tones at conversation level, while turning it down progressively increases the Thunderverb's output level, of which there is plenty.
http://www.thomann.de/gb/cat_musicradar~ncxes.html?uid=34733&ar=119842
Surgeon said:Hey how are you doing?
I have a chance at a very good deal on a TV50 right now and, if you don't mind, would like some input since you own one. I've done some search on the web but again, nothing beats asking directly and folks on the Orange forum aren't the most objective based on my observations.
So, if you don't mind, I have a few questions:
-How does it sound at lower volumes, I really mean in-house non-deafening volumes? Is the attenuator any good at retaining good/great ones? That's the major point for me. If I buy the TV, I sell my TH30 which has the 15-7 watts modes (and is still loud when cranked) and if I'm replacing it with something that sounds bad when dialed down, it wouldn't be a good deal. My rehearsal room in the basement is somewhat soundproofed but I don't want to have to crank it so bad that my wife can't read upstairs without earplugs you know? She's used to hearing me playing but not to walls shaking.
I find that I never really go up to half (or just a tad over half) of the available gain on the TH30. I'm assuming that these levels of gain are achievable on the TV? (I know you don't own one but just generally speaking, I also know the tone will be different, that's a given).
I'm on the fence right now and have to move quick... any help you can send my way will be more than welcome.
Cheers!
Phil
sorry for the delay in my response - I see your thread - I think it is the best amp ever for me and that I need the 50 watts for the low end response and 30watts would not really be acceptable for my application.
I have never used the amp in my apartment though, I have really cranky neighbors so I am not much help, I am sure the sound would be acceptable at tv volume levels, I would worry about doing that constantly though in terms of wear and tear as it is a REALLY LOUD AMP. prolly not the greatest tone doing that.
sorry I am not much help, cheers on the TV awesomest amp ever, lots have it at the orange forum they may be able to help, just label it clearly in your title so they know exactly what your question is, many TV threads there
note: TV does not have an attenuator. it is
The Thunderverb has two global controls, one for reverb and the other for the amp's built-in attenuator. You can use this last one very effectively to get a decent cranked sound at lower volumes - it's best described as a post-master volume and getting back to those twists we mentioned, the attenuator control works backwards compared to a regular volume control, reducing output levels as it's turned clockwise.
The attenuator control is very cool: it acts on both channels simultaneously to lower the postmaster volume signal and reduces output as you turn it clockwise. With the attenuator set almost fully 'up' (turned clockwise), you can get realistic cranked amp tones at conversation level, while turning it down progressively increases the Thunderverb's output level, of which there is plenty.
http://www.thomann.de/gb/cat_musicradar~ncxes.html?uid=34733&ar=119842