Re: Power Attenuators Vs. Variacs
I use a variac on my 1970 Marshall Super Bass in conjunction with a THD Hotplate. With this combo I can get awesome tone from the monster at practice volumes. It really shines up loud, however, as all tube amps do.
I have not experienced and ill-affects from use of the variac and have had no repairs stemming from its use.
I set it on 105 VAC and biased the amp accordingly. Works like a charm for me. The bad thing is if I ever want to go jam with that rig, I have to drag the variac along with me as the amp's bias would be way out of whack if I plugged it into a full 120VAC.
Amps made way back when were spec'd and designed for 110VAC. My wall puts out 122VAC. I like to think I am feeding the amp the voltage it was designed to handle as well as keeping things cool by running it a bit below.
I agree that extreme settings like 85VAC or something of the like is not good as the amp will suffer from voltage starvation.
The THD Hotplate is a great product and I'd recommend it highly. It does a good job of retaining the amps tone and it saves those poor speakers the pummeling. I have found you don't need 100 watts of power to get the volume you want but running a 100 watt power section redlined sounds damn good; even through the THD unit.
I use a variac on my 1970 Marshall Super Bass in conjunction with a THD Hotplate. With this combo I can get awesome tone from the monster at practice volumes. It really shines up loud, however, as all tube amps do.
I have not experienced and ill-affects from use of the variac and have had no repairs stemming from its use.
I set it on 105 VAC and biased the amp accordingly. Works like a charm for me. The bad thing is if I ever want to go jam with that rig, I have to drag the variac along with me as the amp's bias would be way out of whack if I plugged it into a full 120VAC.
Amps made way back when were spec'd and designed for 110VAC. My wall puts out 122VAC. I like to think I am feeding the amp the voltage it was designed to handle as well as keeping things cool by running it a bit below.
I agree that extreme settings like 85VAC or something of the like is not good as the amp will suffer from voltage starvation.
The THD Hotplate is a great product and I'd recommend it highly. It does a good job of retaining the amps tone and it saves those poor speakers the pummeling. I have found you don't need 100 watts of power to get the volume you want but running a 100 watt power section redlined sounds damn good; even through the THD unit.
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