estring said:
I cant seem to get a nice clean tone from my Rectoverb. It breaks up way too early. If I lower the gain below 9:00, i get a decent clean tone, but then I dont have enough volume no matter how I set the Master and the Output.
If I set the gain to above 9:00, I get the volume, but then not even close to a clean sound, its more pushed/overdriven sounding. I've tried several EQ setups too...still can get a clean tone with out breakup.
Can any of you guys get a very clean, warm tone on Channel one and still have the volume??
Is this just the nature of this amp?
Thanks
This doesn't sound right. I have a series 2 RV. I can use the clean ch. (clean mode) and turn the gain up to 1~2 with no issues. It stays clean. I use a 5751 preamp tube in V1 which is 70% gain value of a 12AX7 (12AX7 is considered 100%). I've also used 6L6's and currently use EL34's. No issues with either tube type. Plenty of volume as well.
Check your preamp tubes and also the power tubes. One or more may be faulty or on the way out. They may not be seated 100% properly giving poor contact, so check that, too.
Try a different guitar cable. May be faulty/noisy. Use no effects when going through the elimination process to find your issue. Keep your setup simple. You may have a dirty input jack. Spray contact cleaner and work the jack with your cable in/out several times.
Write everything down on paper so you know what you've done and what you need to do. It's difficult to remember everything as you go through the elimination process as there can be many variables.
Try this to see if the power tubes are faulty:
Bypass the preamp by plugging the guitar into the effects return directly. You may need to use an EQ pedal to boost your guitar level up a little. The master volume out should be clean. NOTE: when plugging in, keep the master volume at zero and then slowly turn it up and play. Having said that, I don't know if there may be an impedance mismatch between guitar and amp, so if it sounds really crap, like a chainsaw buzz/fizz, then it's most likely a mismatch..... however, a power tube may be actually stuffed! So..... use your judgement.
Whichever way, it's always wise to have good spare tubes. It amazes me that so many don't have spare tubes. When things like this happen, at the very least you can try a tube swap and that will eliminate the tubes, which therefore means it must be something else.
See how you go and get back to us.