Combo vs Head/Cabinet

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Mountain Fever

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Sierra Nevada Foothills in California
I've always been a combo owner. Lately as I am lugging 80# around I think that maybe there is some wisdom in going it in two pieces; which for my needs would be a head and a 2x12 cabinet.

Is there any appreciable sound difference to have one platform over the other? I would likely be talking about open back models.
 
Yes.

:)

I pulled my Mk III out of its combo and run it through the most badass 212 ever built. I dig the 112 open-back EV thing - but my current head/cab setup smokes it.

But all in all, it'll depend on the cab and speakers and and and and...

The cool thing about the combo, though - is that when you roll up to a gig with a little baby Mk III combo, nobody is prepared for the tone that comes out of it! Total sleeper! My head/cab setup looks almost as assuming as it really is.
 
Next time you play, do some palm mutes and put your other hand behind the combo by the tubes. Make sure you're playing at a high volume. Feel the air? That's all lost air. A closed cab will hold that air inside and result in a much tighter, deeper, and focused tone. The combo is good for cleans and "airier" sounds where you get some loss of bass. A combo also sounds more "3D."
 
I used to be a combo player for years but I dont think I will ever go back to that . I feel the primary function of a combo is the convenience of having everything in one box . So you are giving up a bit on sound IMHO . Having the cab seperate is yet another way to dial your tone in . Im much happier having ext. cabs than the combo . I know the combo players will disagree but thats why they make so many designs . To satisfy all the different needs .
 
I like both. I like the fact that at some gigs I can just bring my head and use the house cab, OR I like the fact that I can just grab a combo and not have to worry about the house cab or my 4x12 up/down a flight of stairs.
 
I have an 1x12 Ace and a 2x12 Orange cab.

Great versitility and I have the option of running the cab on the opposite side of the stage to spead the sound a bit better.
 
Mountain Fever said:
I've always been a combo owner. Lately as I am lugging 80# around I think that maybe there is some wisdom in going it in two pieces; which for my needs would be a head and a 2x12 cabinet.

Is there any appreciable sound difference to have one platform over the other? I would likely be talking about open back models.

With same speakers and cab, there shouldn't be any difference in sound. I'm thinking about converting my 2x12 combo into a head/cab myself. Beside portability, additional benefit is the tubes will be subjected to less vibration and should help with microphonic issue. The down side is it costs more.
 
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