MusicManJP6 said:wow this seems to go both ways... some say it makes a difference and others say it doesn't... it's about as close as the clinton/obama election!
Charlie said:I think the point Silverwulf is trying to make is that you should start with the tubes and other components before you perform major surgery on your amp. Definitely get a set of preamp tubes to mess around with - then power tubes, speakers etc.. Try the amp through a different cab as well. Maybe a friend has something different you can try out? Try a few different guitars with different pickups as well. A new output tranny should be longer down the list of things to try out.
Silverwulf said:Core9 said:Trannies do make a difference, probably more than many of you think.
Look at the early DR's. The ones that people point to as sounding the best had the Mark III tranny in them. The major chaneg in tone and feel happend when Mesa swapped to the current trannies.
I would bet that someone could swap the transformers in everyones amp here without them knowing and 99% of you would never even know the difference.
Boogiebabies said:So 99% of us are tone deaf morons ? If you change the OT to a quality unit that has a broader frequency of operation, you will hear better lows, mids and highs whether your half deaf or not. It's that simple. The quality control for DeYoung, Mercury and Heyboer are superb. Getting a happy accident out of Dagnall or Shumacher is mostly luck, but can happen.
Well, I would venture the opposing opinion. I'm STARTING with an output transformer upgrade to my 6505, and possibly my Recto and DC-3 later. Perhaps a poor example, but changing tubes in a 6505 is a little like arranging plates on the Titanic. An upgraded OT is the 6505's only hope of ridding it of its overly fizzy tone. I could say the same of my Recto.Charlie said:A new output tranny should be longer down the list of things to try out.
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