Blaklynx
Well-known member
You are not making a fundamental difference to the signal pre-input. You need to make the difference before the signal gets to the amp's input, hence boosting and EQing between guitar and amp. An EQ in the loop will only reduce in volume the frequencies you cut, in your case the treble frequencies, that's why it sounds like a blanket over the speaker. If you up the treble on the amp (which also adds gain somewhat) and then push the gain control up (or leave it as is) you still get a fizz type distortion coming through. That's the nature of the treble control. The manual states (something or rather); pushing the treble past 2oclock get's that 'classic' recto tone.
FYI: The amps tone controls are pre-gain.
Push the front end with an OD pedal (I prefer to use an EQ after the OD as well) as this will change the signal shape. Adjust amp's tone controls. You should be able to smooth out the tone. Make up any shortcomings in tone with an EQ in the loop, as explained on page one (see my links).
Depending how much treble is filtered out before the input, how much it's boosted and how smooth the resulting tone is, if it sounds a little flat and with a 'blanket over speaker' tone, place an EQ in the loop and try boosting the 8~12HZ slider to add some sparkle and presence/topend. Make other adjustments as required.
Try this: reduce all tone controls to 8.30~9 oclock, even zero, and push the gain on the amp. Up the volume on the amp. Is the tone smoother? It should be (within reason)but may sound a little choked or muffled or maybe even wierd. You may affect the signal to such an extent that the amp starts to behave a little odd. Remember what I said earlier? Tone controls are pre-gain. Up the controls slightly. Introduce an OD pedal. Try the EQ out front and use it as a boost only. Try it as a treble booster only. Adjust the amps tone controls slightly. Listen to the amp and feel what the amp is doing at every change.
The more you understand the behaviour of the amp and how pre-gain and post gain tone controls affect your amp (pre and post EQ pedals plus amp's tone controls), plus how the gain control plays it's part, eventually a light will switch on in your head and it should all fall into place. All this is the hard part to understand. You practically have to visualise what's happening with the guitar signal from start to end.
Good luck. I'm not sure what more to say.
FYI: The amps tone controls are pre-gain.
Push the front end with an OD pedal (I prefer to use an EQ after the OD as well) as this will change the signal shape. Adjust amp's tone controls. You should be able to smooth out the tone. Make up any shortcomings in tone with an EQ in the loop, as explained on page one (see my links).
Depending how much treble is filtered out before the input, how much it's boosted and how smooth the resulting tone is, if it sounds a little flat and with a 'blanket over speaker' tone, place an EQ in the loop and try boosting the 8~12HZ slider to add some sparkle and presence/topend. Make other adjustments as required.
Try this: reduce all tone controls to 8.30~9 oclock, even zero, and push the gain on the amp. Up the volume on the amp. Is the tone smoother? It should be (within reason)but may sound a little choked or muffled or maybe even wierd. You may affect the signal to such an extent that the amp starts to behave a little odd. Remember what I said earlier? Tone controls are pre-gain. Up the controls slightly. Introduce an OD pedal. Try the EQ out front and use it as a boost only. Try it as a treble booster only. Adjust the amps tone controls slightly. Listen to the amp and feel what the amp is doing at every change.
The more you understand the behaviour of the amp and how pre-gain and post gain tone controls affect your amp (pre and post EQ pedals plus amp's tone controls), plus how the gain control plays it's part, eventually a light will switch on in your head and it should all fall into place. All this is the hard part to understand. You practically have to visualise what's happening with the guitar signal from start to end.
Good luck. I'm not sure what more to say.