- Joined
- Oct 31, 2023
- Messages
- 101
- Reaction score
- 62
Thank you! It was a little more than I thought I'd have to do, but it has been fun.
I had no idea the Lonestar Special was such a great amp. It sounds amazing in that video.
I played the Mark V through two different cabinets with no other changes except another 12AT7 preamp tube swap at V2. That was too much gain reduction if I want to maintain the character if the amp. With a balanced 12AU7 in the V7 phase splitter position and 12AT7s in V4 and V1 the depth and tonal flexibility of the amp is greatly enhanced, and the high gain tones just sound better. The volume knobs are usable for more of their range. And so between master, volume and gain there is a lot more control over the tone. Going one step further and knocking V2 down to a 12AT7 puts the amp in a very beautiful sounding classic rock place. You get lots of clean and crunchy tones from all three channels, and classic medium gain from channel 3. The IIC+ mode is particularly nice. But the really high gain tones are no longer available and the amp won't get as loud if that is important.
But with any of these gain reductions I'm able to get good amp dynamics that I thought the Mark V couldn't do. The V1 change helped for that, and I will experiment more with which stages benefit the most from reducing gain later.
I get why lowering the gain improved the distortion and harmonics of the amp but I don't yet understand how it seems to improve the dynamics. My best guess is that early gain stages have a higher impedance power rail, and so maybe they contribute more tube compression and have a longer gain recovery time (like the release time knob on a rack compressor). If a later stage saturates then all of those dynamics are lost. If a later stage is on the verge of saturating or is partially distorting and adding harmonics then the dynamics introduced by the early stage will modulate the distortion in a complex and interesting way.
I'll be able to finish my changes and button up the project soon. I'll document what I did a little more. Thank you again for all your help and also to everyone who contributed. I'll reread this thread as I'm finishing up and make sure I've implemented as many of the tips as possible. I didn't really believe it would happen but my amp already sounds amazing.
I had no idea the Lonestar Special was such a great amp. It sounds amazing in that video.
I played the Mark V through two different cabinets with no other changes except another 12AT7 preamp tube swap at V2. That was too much gain reduction if I want to maintain the character if the amp. With a balanced 12AU7 in the V7 phase splitter position and 12AT7s in V4 and V1 the depth and tonal flexibility of the amp is greatly enhanced, and the high gain tones just sound better. The volume knobs are usable for more of their range. And so between master, volume and gain there is a lot more control over the tone. Going one step further and knocking V2 down to a 12AT7 puts the amp in a very beautiful sounding classic rock place. You get lots of clean and crunchy tones from all three channels, and classic medium gain from channel 3. The IIC+ mode is particularly nice. But the really high gain tones are no longer available and the amp won't get as loud if that is important.
But with any of these gain reductions I'm able to get good amp dynamics that I thought the Mark V couldn't do. The V1 change helped for that, and I will experiment more with which stages benefit the most from reducing gain later.
I get why lowering the gain improved the distortion and harmonics of the amp but I don't yet understand how it seems to improve the dynamics. My best guess is that early gain stages have a higher impedance power rail, and so maybe they contribute more tube compression and have a longer gain recovery time (like the release time knob on a rack compressor). If a later stage saturates then all of those dynamics are lost. If a later stage is on the verge of saturating or is partially distorting and adding harmonics then the dynamics introduced by the early stage will modulate the distortion in a complex and interesting way.
I'll be able to finish my changes and button up the project soon. I'll document what I did a little more. Thank you again for all your help and also to everyone who contributed. I'll reread this thread as I'm finishing up and make sure I've implemented as many of the tips as possible. I didn't really believe it would happen but my amp already sounds amazing.