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So, here's a question....is it preferable to have my amp's channel volume high and my master volume low, or vice versa? What's the advantage to either?
The way I understand it (and I may be completely off here) is that the channel volume is before the power amp and the master volume is the power amp. So for optimal power tube driving, I'd think that you'd want master up and channel down.
The way I understand it (and I may be completely off here) is that the channel volume is before the power amp and the master volume is the power amp. So for optimal power tube driving, I'd think that you'd want master up and channel down.
The way I understand it (and I may be completely off here) is that the channel volume is before the power amp and the master volume is the power amp. So for optimal power tube driving, I'd think that you'd want master up and channel down.
but if you have the channel volume down, then you are not pushing the preamp tubes. and in many amps most of the distortion is coming from driving the preamp tubes hard. isnt that why we use an OD pedal in front? ...to push the preamp tubes harder than the amp itself can?
I would say, you gotta have your channel vol all the way up AND the master volume up considerably. this would go hand in hand with the concept that tube amps sound best cranked up.
but if you have the channel volume down, then you are not pushing the preamp tubes. and in many amps most of the distortion is coming from driving the preamp tubes hard. isnt that why we use an OD pedal in front? ...to push the preamp tubes harder than the amp itself can?
I would say, you gotta have your channel vol all the way up AND the master volume up considerably. this would go hand in hand with the concept that tube amps sound best cranked up.
But wouldn't the gain knob control how much the preamp tubes are pushed?
I'll try each one when I get home tonight and report on my findings.
Hmm...I'm interested to see what your "findings" are....I'm looking for maximum gain/saturation, but at gig volumes (as opposed to in the desert or something when I can play the amp to full volume!), which means the master volume can't be maxed...I've seen different opinions on this on other boards, so I'm glad to see the discussion here!
But wouldn't the gain knob control how much the preamp tubes are pushed?
I'll try each one when I get home tonight and report on my findings.
yes you are right. gain pushes the preamp tubes and adding a OD pedal in front pushes them even further. but the preamp volume decides how much of that signal reaches the power amp. If you reduce that, then the power tubes dont have much to amplify. Its like adding a volume box that they sell on eBay in the fx loop.
Hmm...I'm interested to see what your "findings" are....I'm looking for maximum gain/saturation, but at gig volumes (as opposed to in the desert or something when I can play the amp to full volume!), which means the master volume can't be maxed...I've seen different opinions on this on other boards, so I'm glad to see the discussion here!
you can use an attenuator which can be used to reduce the amount of volume that reaches the speakers. so, you can increase the master all the way up and still play a lower volumes. but they suck a lot of tone so you've gotta get the good ones like a THD hotplate or a weber Mass attenuators.
Hotplates are very helpful here.
I run my JSX with the Master at minimum set to 5
channel volumes anywhere over 4 and then cut it back with the hotplate.
Running the Master at full and the channel volumes down ususally gives you a spongier looser "power amp" distortion
and running the channel volume dimed will give you tighter "preamp" gain.
I always try to find a middle ground.
Hmm...I'm interested to see what your "findings" are....I'm looking for maximum gain/saturation, but at gig volumes (as opposed to in the desert or something when I can play the amp to full volume!), which means the master volume can't be maxed...I've seen different opinions on this on other boards, so I'm glad to see the discussion here!
Just get a higher gained amp! Don't compensate preamp volume for gain if your playing metal! But cooking those tubes for something bluesy or rock works great! Then again this is just my opinion! I like my metal tone clean!!
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