Chris McKinley
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2006
- Messages
- 568
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mikey383,
You went smartass first, kiddo. I just returned fire. As to 6L6's and EL34's, I'm glad you're happy with your sound, and having played through a large variety of both types of tubes and switched them here and there I will confirm that there is a large tonal difference between the two types of power tube, but merely running 6L6's does not automatically put the emphasis on the low mids the way a Recto does.
Again, the primary reason for this is not an arbitrary byproduct of a choice of which power amp tube to put in it, but a purposeful choice on Randall's part to tune the tone stack of the amp that way, specifically to sound a) different and b) heavier than the Marshall JCM-800 which was the industry standard for heavy metal at the time.
While it's true that you can mitigate some of that emphasis merely by swapping for some EL34's (which I've done before), you could provide a much more dramatic change by swapping the Recto's tone stack for that found in a Marshall and using the same 12AX7's that Marshall does, all while leaving the 6L6's in place.
The choice to go with a 6LC platform was part of the strategy in creating the Rectos, but it was because those tubes were capable of lower and more powerful lows than EL34's (and higher highs, for that matter), not because they automatically provided an unavoidable emphasis on the low mids.
You went smartass first, kiddo. I just returned fire. As to 6L6's and EL34's, I'm glad you're happy with your sound, and having played through a large variety of both types of tubes and switched them here and there I will confirm that there is a large tonal difference between the two types of power tube, but merely running 6L6's does not automatically put the emphasis on the low mids the way a Recto does.
Again, the primary reason for this is not an arbitrary byproduct of a choice of which power amp tube to put in it, but a purposeful choice on Randall's part to tune the tone stack of the amp that way, specifically to sound a) different and b) heavier than the Marshall JCM-800 which was the industry standard for heavy metal at the time.
While it's true that you can mitigate some of that emphasis merely by swapping for some EL34's (which I've done before), you could provide a much more dramatic change by swapping the Recto's tone stack for that found in a Marshall and using the same 12AX7's that Marshall does, all while leaving the 6L6's in place.
The choice to go with a 6LC platform was part of the strategy in creating the Rectos, but it was because those tubes were capable of lower and more powerful lows than EL34's (and higher highs, for that matter), not because they automatically provided an unavoidable emphasis on the low mids.