Dror520
Well-known member
as the title says what is difference between those two setups .. which one is better ? I assume that the combo is easier to move around but is it load enough and gets the same sound as a head and cab ??
inmyhands said:I own multiple heads and multiple speaker cabinets. I would not have it any other way.
Speakers play a huge part in what you hear. The same goes with cabinet styles and builds. I've found speakers that excel at different sounds / tones just like amplifiers or guitar pickups do. I try and match the best speakers to the best cabs to the best amps to the best pickups to the best guitars to come up with the very best tones for whatever I'm recording at the time.
I know that this is going foolishly overboard, but, in a head to head comparison, each piece adds or detracts from the quality of the finished product.
I don't like combos because they limit the exceptional abilities of the amp involved. No amp is at its best for every tone and gain level with the same set of speakers. If your use is very narrow, ("I want the most beautiful high gain tone with strong mids, sweet highs, and am willing to sacrifice a bit of bass and punch"), by a Mark II, III, or IV combo. If on the other hand your recording something or performing something that needs more punch or more bass you'll sound better with a head within the same grouping matched with one of any multiple of speaker cabinets that provide the enhancement needed for those tones.
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