YellowJacket
Well-known member
I ran into my friend who I hadn't seen in ages at a music store out in hickville Manitoba. We decided we should get together and jam and it turns out he now has a Dual Rectifier just as I do. I recall at a show years ago, he used mine and commented "I could get used to this!" Not surprisingly, he now has one. He was curious about the differences between the two since people talk a lot about it on the internet. I hadn't ever noticed so I decided we should do a test. We used the same power tubes, the same cab, and the same guitar, a Jackson with a Seymour Duncan Dimebag Darryl (RIP) pickup in the neck.
The general impression was that they did sound very similar to one another but mine (the Rev F) had a creamier and more organic tone with less pronounced or 'fizzy' highs. It also had a more emphasized bass response as well. The 3 channel sounded more brittle, especially on channel three which has the different taper on the presence pot. We discovered that very similar tones could be dialed in with different settings i.e. turning the bass down and the presence up on my head but it still had that creamier and more organic tone. Although the preamp tubes might be somewhat responsible for the difference, this is really splitting hairs. I've retubed my amp recently so it no longer has the originals and the differences in tone between the two amps are basically the same as what were described on the Boogie Archives webpage (RIP =-p )
As for the clean, he commented that he should "copy my clean settings because they sound great." Whatever that means. It might be the amp but I thought the clean tone was further improved for the 3 channel heads. Next time we get together, we are going to try his Recto 2 x 12 against my Thiele 2 x 12 and he wants to try EL-34s in his head. He said he stayed away from the EL-34s because the manual said they make the amp sound more "Marshally" and he wants it to sound like a Mesa. I mentioned that they really enhance the tone of the Dual and a lot of guys here love them. I, for one, never want to go back to 6L6s, at least not for guitar. I use them in my head for when I'm using it with my Ashdown 210 and Fender P-Bass as a bass practice amp. Works fine for that!
The general impression was that they did sound very similar to one another but mine (the Rev F) had a creamier and more organic tone with less pronounced or 'fizzy' highs. It also had a more emphasized bass response as well. The 3 channel sounded more brittle, especially on channel three which has the different taper on the presence pot. We discovered that very similar tones could be dialed in with different settings i.e. turning the bass down and the presence up on my head but it still had that creamier and more organic tone. Although the preamp tubes might be somewhat responsible for the difference, this is really splitting hairs. I've retubed my amp recently so it no longer has the originals and the differences in tone between the two amps are basically the same as what were described on the Boogie Archives webpage (RIP =-p )
As for the clean, he commented that he should "copy my clean settings because they sound great." Whatever that means. It might be the amp but I thought the clean tone was further improved for the 3 channel heads. Next time we get together, we are going to try his Recto 2 x 12 against my Thiele 2 x 12 and he wants to try EL-34s in his head. He said he stayed away from the EL-34s because the manual said they make the amp sound more "Marshally" and he wants it to sound like a Mesa. I mentioned that they really enhance the tone of the Dual and a lot of guys here love them. I, for one, never want to go back to 6L6s, at least not for guitar. I use them in my head for when I'm using it with my Ashdown 210 and Fender P-Bass as a bass practice amp. Works fine for that!