94Tremoverb
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Hey KH, do you sell power conditioners by any chance?
No offense intended, but you recommend one for just about every problem... which it won't cure. If you're having trouble with AC line voltage variation or line-borne noise, they're a great solution, but just about every problem I've seen mentioned here is not caused by those things and a power conditioner won't do anything at all to fix.
Sure, a power conditioner doesn't do anything bad, and if you want to spend the money and carry the extra gear there's no reason not to have one... but it isn't necessary or even useful to solve almost any of these issues. If you're getting problems with tone variation randomly or when you move from one venue to another, then you may need one, because those problems *are* often caused by the supply.
But an amp that sounds bad when it's turned up loud, or starts to sound off after a fixed time of use, or just doesn't have the tone you want from comparing it to a recording (of a different amp even!), or several other things, are *not* caused by AC line problems.
I'm not saying "don't buy a power conditioner" - just that you need to know what to buy one for and why.
No offense intended, but you recommend one for just about every problem... which it won't cure. If you're having trouble with AC line voltage variation or line-borne noise, they're a great solution, but just about every problem I've seen mentioned here is not caused by those things and a power conditioner won't do anything at all to fix.
Sure, a power conditioner doesn't do anything bad, and if you want to spend the money and carry the extra gear there's no reason not to have one... but it isn't necessary or even useful to solve almost any of these issues. If you're getting problems with tone variation randomly or when you move from one venue to another, then you may need one, because those problems *are* often caused by the supply.
But an amp that sounds bad when it's turned up loud, or starts to sound off after a fixed time of use, or just doesn't have the tone you want from comparing it to a recording (of a different amp even!), or several other things, are *not* caused by AC line problems.
I'm not saying "don't buy a power conditioner" - just that you need to know what to buy one for and why.