onelastrun2002
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- Jan 2, 2007
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Hi everyone, I am due to receive my Stiletto Ace 2x12 in a couple of weeks from Mesa and am wondering about breaking in the speakers. My experience with my Rectifier Standard 4x12 was that the tone was much improved after the speakers were broken in. I found the following on Celestion's website reference this:
"How do I break in my speakers?
Important Note! Before breaking it in it's advisable to "warm up" the speaker gently for a few minutes with low-level playing or background hum.
Break in a speaker with a fat, clean tone: turn up the power amp volume to full, and control the level with the preamp gain. Use a level that will be quite loud, but not painful in a normal size room.
Have the bass and mid up full, and the treble at least half. On your guitar, use the middle pick up position (if your guitar has more than one pick up) and play for 10-15 minutes using lots of open chords, and chunky percussive playing. This will get the cone moving, and should excite all the cone modes and get everything to settle in nicely. The speaker will continue to mature over the years, but this will get it 95% of the way to tonal perfection in the shortest time."
Obviously, this is generic advice from the point of view of the speaker maker, not the amp maker. My questions are: 1) Would this be safe to do with the Ace?; 2) Is it worth doing?
Thanks.
"How do I break in my speakers?
Important Note! Before breaking it in it's advisable to "warm up" the speaker gently for a few minutes with low-level playing or background hum.
Break in a speaker with a fat, clean tone: turn up the power amp volume to full, and control the level with the preamp gain. Use a level that will be quite loud, but not painful in a normal size room.
Have the bass and mid up full, and the treble at least half. On your guitar, use the middle pick up position (if your guitar has more than one pick up) and play for 10-15 minutes using lots of open chords, and chunky percussive playing. This will get the cone moving, and should excite all the cone modes and get everything to settle in nicely. The speaker will continue to mature over the years, but this will get it 95% of the way to tonal perfection in the shortest time."
Obviously, this is generic advice from the point of view of the speaker maker, not the amp maker. My questions are: 1) Would this be safe to do with the Ace?; 2) Is it worth doing?
Thanks.