I've never had an amp with a Presence knob on it, and I would like to know what does it actually do?... I know it¡s a newbe question, but I just never had one.
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Presence knob on an amp
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It's basically a treble control for the power section. I have Presence and Resonance knobs on my Peavey Classic 50/50 power amp, which control the treble and bass, respectively. I have seen some amp documentation refer to it as a speaker-dampening function, which might be accurate, but I think of it as being the "last mile" of EQ and use it mainly to compensate for tinny or bassy mic'd tone through venue PAs.
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I have not researched it heavily to know technically exactly what it does.
However, my take is that is controls the mids and trebble on the power section side. Kinda pushes them up simultaneously. If not controlled properly it can give you a shrill tone that could be a bit sharp.
Will certainly help you cut through the mix since you are boosting your mid and upper frequencies. Kinda like a lead singer.Mr. Patience.... ask for a free consultation.
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Originally posted by Racerx2k View PostControls the highs, more so, normally around the 6 to 8 khz range, sometimes a bit more. I always tend to gravitate toward an amp with a good presence control. I always like to hear those frequencies in my tone, somewhat.
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Originally posted by Firebird V View PostYeah me too. I use it pretty much almost dimed on some amps and use the treble very little...I'm not Ron!
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Originally posted by demeyes View Posthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLs0_jaDW2g
Its a clip from a Paul Gilbert instructional where he talks about presence....presents?I'm not Ron!
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Presence controls the amount of upper treble frequencies fed back as negative feedback from the power stage. More upper treble fed back = less upper treble out. This is generally implemented as a low pass filter in the negative feedback loop. Resonance apparently does the same thing for lower frequencies.
FYI I cribbed this extensively from "The Guitar Amp Handbook" by Dave Hunter. Great book, by the way."It's hard to be enigmatic if you have to go around explaining yourself all the time"
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