Does A Tube Amp Sound Better CRANKED?? Or Not... (Mesa, Orange & Marshall)

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 396

  • @SonicDriveStudio
    @SonicDriveStudio  2 года назад +16

    So what do you guys think?

    • @n0nyabznss
      @n0nyabznss 2 года назад +2

      I prefer loud but with some questions....
      On the Marshall, why did the clips sound virtually the same if a JCM800 doesn't have a Gain knob? All I saw from both reference tones was that the master knob moved from 1 to 4. To my knowledge, the JCM800 needs to be dimed to get good tones and the baby 800 didn't behave that way.
      The Orange.... I hate their labeling scheme for the knobs and noticed the same deal as the 800.
      The Mesa sounded virtually the same as well with more top end on the loud setting. Can you tell us what settings were changed from the normal vs. loud settings?
      I would've been good to see you tweak the levels and also have a room/cab mic instead of using a reactive load.

    • @void_snw
      @void_snw 2 года назад +4

      I think a bit of that smoothing is probably good, but too much and you lose definition. Here I preferred the quieter takes! On that same note, you should reeeaaally check out that video by Jim Lill. Absolutely eye opening when it comes to interactions of different parts of an amp. It's this one: ruclips.net/video/wcBEOcPtlYk/видео.html

    • @luca4352
      @luca4352 2 года назад +1

      @@n0nyabznss The 800 does have a gain knob, it is labeled as 'preamp'. If you would push the master volume even further, there would be more gain, but not more loudness. I think you misunderstood this video. All the settings are the same, only variable is the master volume, which is set relativeley quiet or relatively loud as seen on the video.

    • @hkguitar1984
      @hkguitar1984 2 года назад

      Especially on the Marshall I could tell the difference in the loud. There was a passage played where during the loud the Marshall seemed to have a bit of mids push.

    • @Nicholas-Santiago
      @Nicholas-Santiago 2 года назад +4

      subtler differences than i was expecting, but HOLY CRAP your riffs are fantastic!!

  • @FatSoundStudio
    @FatSoundStudio 2 года назад +28

    Man that Orange just plain sounded killer all around.

    • @SonicDriveStudio
      @SonicDriveStudio  2 года назад

      It never fails to impress!

    • @rodrigosallesguitar
      @rodrigosallesguitar Год назад

      It sounds SO damn good!!

    • @valkyrieseaurchins
      @valkyrieseaurchins Год назад

      I AGREE…. Wow..

    • @compucorder64
      @compucorder64 8 дней назад

      These kinds of Orange amps are killer. If you can't afford the Rockerverb, I'd highly recommend picking up a second-hand Orange Rocker 30. Got one and they sound great. They're an amp that doesn't need to be cranked to sound great. Sonic Drive Studio's demo convinced me to pull the trigger. Sounds great with a Way Huge Swollen Pickle.

  • @MPB47
    @MPB47 2 года назад +25

    I also prefer something in between blazingly loud and quiet, then dial in from there. I'd like to hear a comparison that includes the Engl Fireball 25 and MT-15.

  • @picksalot1
    @picksalot1 2 года назад +6

    Fascinating comparison. I've also heard numerous claims that Amps sound better when cranked, but I preferred the "quite" tones on all those Amps for the same reasons you mentioned. Thanks

  • @francoisfavreau769
    @francoisfavreau769 Год назад +1

    I'm really glad that you did these demo because i realize that i like it more on your quiet settings,it has more definition to my ear.thanks for sharing,knowledge is always appreciate

  • @hisroyalsucculence
    @hisroyalsucculence 2 года назад +24

    So glad you did this. I've never believed that an amp cranked would actually sound better, and you demonstrated this. I preferred the lower volume settings. Higher volume setting sounded more compressed (not in a good way) and more tubby (for lack of a better term).

  • @richarddwjensen
    @richarddwjensen 2 года назад +4

    YES! This video was so useful! I prefer the quiet tones to the loud ones. This flies in the face of years of marketing and traditional guitar "wisdom".

  • @cameronjohnsonaudio
    @cameronjohnsonaudio Год назад +7

    Fantastic Video Jon.
    I can't believe I'm going to say this, but I prefer the sound of all of the amps at their quiet level. That was a real eye opener. I think I like the articulation of the playing being more present, due to, I think, the less compression and saturation the tubes are imparting.
    What would be REALLY interesting is if you could do this exact thing again, but mic up a cabinet and then level match the results to see the effect that the cab has on the tone (pushed vs not so pushed).
    Great job man... Loved It!!

    • @Zappabain
      @Zappabain Год назад

      I saw a guy search for the tone of Nevermind by Nirvana. He only achieved it with the old version of some cabs, I think they were Green-whatever. Think is I'd say they sounded better for that Nevermind tone because they added distortion at those levels, and the new ones probably didn't because it's not something sought after nowadays.

  • @jbalancomposer9899
    @jbalancomposer9899 Год назад +5

    Appreciate this video Jon. Cranking them is the opposite of what I want out of an amp. Mushy and undefined. I much prefer the articulate (and IMO) balanced sound of the quieter volumes. It's sort of like the difference between a Les Paul and a Tele. As usual, quality riffs :)

  • @798125
    @798125 Год назад +3

    I think you hit it on the head John, most people are hearing the fletcher Munson curve when they crank up the amp and mistakenly think that it’s the amp that is causing the perceived tonal difference.

  • @mmagoon67
    @mmagoon67 2 года назад +2

    Yea, I had some questions too because every amp is different in terms of what happens when you push it. I think a loud comparison would have been better with the volumes at 1 and 8-10. Regardless of wether or not it gets dark, if you leave the EQ the same it will remain dark. So EQ it for the low setting and then EQ it for the loud setting. You should be able to achieve just as clear of a sound with the Marshall when it's cranked, but with thicker, fuller mids. Obviously not all tube amps sound better when they're cranked. Some start to get nasty sounding. Every amp has a sweet spot.
    Also, wattage has less to do with loudness and more to do with headroom, mostly when you get past the 15-20w amps. How much can I turn it up before the power amp section starts to become affected. If you don't push the amp then the preamp section is free to do its thing cleanly rather then become affected/flavored by the power section.

  • @Bret_Sanor
    @Bret_Sanor Год назад +2

    My experience is each amp usually has its optimal sweet spot somewhere in the middle ground. My Mesa Triple rec didn't sound great turned up super loud nor did it sound good at very quiet volumes. The master around 10 o'clock was where it worked. Each amp has a sweet spot where it behaves well, is stable and dynamic. What you showed is exactly my experience with amps as well. Great job.

  • @mikeb5372
    @mikeb5372 2 года назад +28

    The quiet versions had a little more treble but sound close enough not to matter. The thing is that cranking tube amps for tone refers mainly to non high gain amps(when set to low volume) such as plexis, JTMs, Fenders and vox ACs. The amps you tried don't fit the traditional reason for needing to crank them up

    • @MrSneakyPants
      @MrSneakyPants Год назад +2

      a little more to it than that, but you are partially correct.

    • @joejohnson8966
      @joejohnson8966 Год назад +1

      @@MrSneakyPants yes, same answer from me.

    • @MrSneakyPants
      @MrSneakyPants Год назад

      @@joejohnson8966 right? There are other considerations like not having a dedicated master volume on an amp, etc.

    • @joejohnson8966
      @joejohnson8966 Год назад +1

      @@MrSneakyPants oh, for sure.

  • @singleproppilot
    @singleproppilot 2 года назад +33

    In all cases I preferred the quiet sound. The loud sounds just sounded dark, compressed, and flubby on the low end.
    Edit: Once again, I have to compliment your playing, Jon. You are a talented riff writer.

    • @agirotto1
      @agirotto1 2 года назад +1

      Same here. Louder samples were all a bit muffled.

    • @JorisGriffioen
      @JorisGriffioen 2 года назад +1

      Remember no other settings are changed. This is why you should tweak your tone at the volume that you'll actually use it.

    • @svenzia
      @svenzia 2 года назад +1

      Agree with Paul

    • @bungwung4797
      @bungwung4797 2 года назад +1

      true

    • @guilherme0stevan
      @guilherme0stevan 2 года назад

      Is he using impulse response for cabs? 🤔 Because real speakers has more difference...

  • @kylehuddleston2217
    @kylehuddleston2217 2 года назад +9

    I actually really like the sound of my Dual Rectifier at a lower volume. I figured I'd need an attenuator to get the goods, so I was pleasantly surprised.

  • @erikr968
    @erikr968 2 года назад +5

    I'm surprised you didn't turn up the amps more. The "loud" level was less than halfway up on the master (yes that's still loud with a speaker, but you're using a load box...). It's no surprise the difference was subtle.
    I suggest doing a follow-up with three volume levels: quiet (as in this clip), medium (just over halfway up) and cranked (all the way up).
    Also, in an actual live or recording scenario, you would adjust the preamp gain and tone controls when cranking up the amp. For example, on the JCM800, you could reduce the preamp gain when the power tubes start clipping, which makes the preamp brighter (due to the bright cap), adding sparkle, as the poweramp gets darker.

  • @BruBrusmayhem
    @BruBrusmayhem 2 года назад

    I Really like that video ! Nice playing, nice editing, very good experiment !
    However. I do own an AC15, a Roadking II head and a Valveking 100 and I've recorded quite a bit with those things through a mic'ed 2x12 (hughes&kettner tm212) and a SM57 + E906 and also through my Torpedo load box.
    I must say that I don't trust my ears when comparing quiet vs loud in the room because load will always sounds better to a music afficionado haha.
    In the DAW however, When I want to go through a cab for various reasons, I always record my amps at loud volumes because there is kind of a mid-range presence and top-end smoothing that I can't get at lower volumes. The loadbox on the other hand will offer me similar results as I hear on this video between loud and quiet!
    Again, your experiment really captures the compression that happens while driving the power tubes and it is the best video to showcase that !
    But I do believe there is more to the question if we consider the recording through a cab and mics part !
    to me, recording through mics and cabs, driving those tubes is effectively compressing the sound but also, in my opinion, unlocking a wonderful tonal potential that can only be found if you change the amp's settings to better fit your newly acquired compression, which will unfortunately prevent an adequate analysis/comparison on youtube ! If it makes sense, I can get a more aggressive sounding rythmic tone with less fizz at high volumes than at low volumes... Its almost like the amp being naturally compressed and how the speaker moves affects your EQ in a way where it removes the high-end harshness so you can be more aggressive on those mid and treble knobs without compromising tone or making your amp sound like a weed wacker.. Like its ''fuller, richer''.
    Only my 2 cents coming from a very very limited background in recording amps. I know you have way more experience and knowledge than I do and you might have tested what I'm saying already without finding any different results which would mean I'm just not recording real amps properly and I can live with that too hahaha !
    huge respect for your work man ! keep it up

  • @gral9440
    @gral9440 2 года назад +1

    I played almost 10 years with an Evh 5150 III 50w mk1 at lower level (bedroom level). Since last December I plugged it in a powerstation 2 which allowed me to crank it up between 1 or 2 o'clock and it's it's like night and day. I'm know able to lower the gain knob under 11 o'clock on blue channel and with to help of the power tubes saturation i'm able to have enough gain to sound less modern

  • @Chord_The_Seeker
    @Chord_The_Seeker 2 года назад

    Great video. There was much less of a difference in tone than I expected. The same guys you were talking about who say you have to crank an amp to really hear the tubes work are going to complain that you didn’t dime the amps, and that you have to max out the volume to really hear a difference.

  • @bobbyblair6862
    @bobbyblair6862 2 года назад +5

    I've always preferred big tube amps at a medium volume, even with bass. Otherwise, the low end gets blurry and the highs get too compressed. Great demo!

  • @rockchunk9417
    @rockchunk9417 2 года назад +4

    It would have been a help if you’d have posted the db levels of the quiet and loud so people would know how quiet it was and how much louder it was, other than that very enlightening

  • @ozzlayer
    @ozzlayer Год назад

    the difference is very small but the loud setting sounds tighter.
    good video

  • @ophic
    @ophic 2 года назад +21

    I'd really like to see this done again but with a mic'd cab. The "amp sweet spot" thing pre-dates the modern load-box/IR technique by quite a number of years, and I bet the speaker cabinet has a lot to do with that.

    • @bobbyblair6862
      @bobbyblair6862 2 года назад +2

      Most wouldn't hear a difference, unless your a "golden ear"

    • @ophic
      @ophic 2 года назад +5

      @@bobbyblair6862 I dunno, to my ears there's an mic/cab dynamic that you only get with a certain amount of volume. I disagree with his statement that speakers are linear up to distortion - I also think they're non-linear at the quiet end. Or maybe it comes from the mic - no idea, I've just had a lot more success miking cabs with a bit of volume.

    • @mrcoatsworth429
      @mrcoatsworth429 2 года назад +2

      @@ophic you may say that (and I'm not necessarily saying you're wrong), but I'd really like to see how you'd perform in a blindtest with recordings of a mic'ed cab and an IR of the exact same setup. Human perception is easily deceived by visuals and preconceptions.

    • @ophic
      @ophic 2 года назад

      @@mrcoatsworth429 Probably couldn't tell the difference, as long as the speaker cab was loud enough to be equivalent to the IR. If the cab was miked at a very low volume, I think I could tell. Maybe if the IR was created at the same low volume, it would sound identical.

    • @mrcoatsworth429
      @mrcoatsworth429 2 года назад +2

      @@ophic maybe, I don't know. Has anybody experimented with creating IRs at different volumes? That would be very interesting.

  • @paulbeharrell
    @paulbeharrell 2 года назад +2

    Another superb video Jon! This was a great illustration of finding the “sweet spot” and how important it is to use one’s ears. Modern reactive loads allow us to this in any location while keeping Fletcher & Munson out of the equation. Cheers 🤘🏻😎🎸

  • @Casrock1
    @Casrock1 2 года назад +1

    Hey man! Really dig your channel, and tunes! Just wanted to say this. 4 on an amp is the starting point,. when amps begin to open up 6.5- 7 is where the magic of the output tubes happen using w real cabs pushing the spkrs. Which is when they sound their best. I 've worked alongside some of the big names in rock and that's how it's done when using a real amps and cabs at large venues and large festival shows.

    • @Casrock1
      @Casrock1 Год назад

      @@deconstruction3397 Actually, when you back off the pre and crank the volume, they sound great. Too much pre and volume past a certain point on the amp is exactly that. Give it a shot and you'll hear quite the difference.

    • @Casrock1
      @Casrock1 Год назад

      @@deconstruction3397 No disrespect but I know what I know after 25+ yrs. Happy Holidays!

  • @cmd_f5
    @cmd_f5 Год назад +4

    Here goes.
    1. Marshall: It's great when quiet. Lotsa transients and very rock sounding. Loud sounds too puffy.
    2. Orange. Totally into the cranked version. Just adds more body to an already great tone!
    3. Recto. Quieter wins here. Rectos are meant for preamp distortion and just a hint of power coloration. This is a great example.
    As always your compare vids are the best!

  • @CortMarshal
    @CortMarshal 2 года назад +1

    Fletcher Munson and sound in the room is super important. Ears are weird things.
    From what I'm hearing, the master volume on the Marshall adds bass and sag, makes notes less articulate, and you end up with less control over palm mutes and playing dynamics. It seem like with the master turned down, a nice boost pedal could make more of a difference over the sound.
    As you said, you'd really want to change the EQ settings for the volume difference. Could definitely see where you'd want certain parts of songs to be recorded with lower master for clarity. A more compressed rhythm sound that tucks into the mix might work better with a high master.

  • @drumthrone10
    @drumthrone10 Год назад

    Wow! Interesting. I hear the same results with my Mesa Throttle Box EQ pedal (when playing around with its volume knob) thru the normal input of my Boss Katana 100 compared to the Dual Recto in this vid. Thanks for this video. Nice!

  • @adriantravelian2216
    @adriantravelian2216 Год назад +5

    There's something important to note here: the speaker is a fixed ecuation, speakers have a dynamic character based on volumes and the type of sounds played through them. So the test is ONLY related to the amp itself, perhaps results might be different if used with a real speaker.

    • @BrewReview
      @BrewReview Год назад

      Agreed. There always IR's being used and that a just not the same thing as pushing air in a room. It's one thing that really bugs me about amp reviews lately. I might be old school but I feel like I can't get a sense of what an amp is really doing with that layer of emulation attached rather than a traditional speaker for some reason. Maybe it's a brain thing but I just discount the sounds as 'altered'.
      In addition all of these amps sound similar because they're all relying heavily on their preamp distortion. Power tubes just don't add much else to the tone here. Take a non-master volume amp and only use the volume and it's a different thing altogether though.

  • @Gizmo-st1ky
    @Gizmo-st1ky 2 года назад

    Wow!! What a cool experiment! I really dug both quiet and loud! Knowing this definitely helps in exploring more tonal options with my amp, or any amp!

  • @SHouseRecords
    @SHouseRecords Год назад

    Interesting video. I would imagine there's a pretty sweet butter zone somewhere in between the loud and quiet settings. Especially for someone who would be using real speakers.

  • @Kathayne636
    @Kathayne636 10 месяцев назад

    Friggin' great idea and execution.

  • @sergioserramusic
    @sergioserramusic 2 года назад +1

    Yeah, on my Mini Jubilee the difference between the master below 12:00 and over 12:00 is massive, it gets so fat and juicy without losing clarity tho. I love it! (I use an attenuator)

  • @MRxr400
    @MRxr400 2 года назад +1

    i feel like there may be a factor missing here. if you dial in a quiet amp to make it sound nice, the same settings turned up loud may not work as well. ie, usually quiet amps can be a little bright, so you cut the treble to smooth out, but at higher volume treble balances out and you probably could add it back in. the biggest factor is the louder you get, the mids get thicker and louder. just a thought. the quiet settings of this video sat well in the mix with cut and to me sounded better.

    • @MRxr400
      @MRxr400 2 года назад

      oh, and in regards to the mesa. they have an over-all master volume as well as channel master volume. i run the over=all master at 12 o'clock and that seems to help with having a nice open power amp sound with headroom. channel volume to suit level of amp in room. sounds best to me that way.

  • @Middlestepofficial
    @Middlestepofficial Год назад +1

    When the amp is loud, it loses articulation. You can't hear the pick hitting the string anymore. The tubes add saturation and that kills some of the transients that can otherwise be crucial for certain genres that require precise picking.

  • @hansgrayman4809
    @hansgrayman4809 2 года назад +2

    Amps have a sweet spot like a lot of things. I always try to hit the sweet spot. My girlfriend appreciates this too.

  • @icenic_wolf
    @icenic_wolf 2 года назад +1

    I've always heard "crank it up to sound good" for one of three categories:
    1) non master volume amps
    2) when speaker breakup is desired (e.g. greenbacks; Nuno has talked about liking them before, for specifically this purpose)
    3) for when you want as much power tube saturation as possible (so... starting with ~4 on the master volume for your mini-jcm800, and then turned all of the way up as the comparison to to when it's at 4); often this is with non-master-volume amps, but also with some of the high-gain master-volume late-90s amps like the Mark IV that normally have a ton of headroom at bedroom volumes.

  • @ericwarrington6650
    @ericwarrington6650 2 года назад +1

    To my ears the Marshall has more individual string definition and harmonics at quiet level and slightly brighter.. however the compression and smoothness of the loud level is more suited to chugging and metal type tones...both very usable..the orange one is more subtle but get the same effect w compression and darker tone.. quiet level is more open...the mesa was very much consistent throughout imo...more noticeable with chugging for sure..great video man.. would love to hear another 3 amps! The soldano slo and the evh iconic and the Friedman dirty Shirley?

  • @thunderhorseofficial
    @thunderhorseofficial 2 года назад +1

    The Orange RV50mkIII was the best one cranked! It sounded bigger and the Marshall and Mesa sounded like they were collapsing on themselves a bit. Team #orangeamps!

  • @barrymurphy5548
    @barrymurphy5548 2 года назад

    Brilliantly done, and man that Rockerverb sounds killer !!

  • @andrewcrossman2165
    @andrewcrossman2165 2 года назад

    Just have to see all of your demos you use for your tests Are bad ass great work sir

  • @marcotaticchi5343
    @marcotaticchi5343 2 года назад

    Grat video, thank you!
    My preference goes to the "Quiet" sound,
    anyway "De gustibus non est disputandum".

  • @JockeLundgrenTV
    @JockeLundgrenTV Год назад

    Great job! Thanks from Sweden. 🙋🏻‍♂️

  • @jcwear89
    @jcwear89 2 года назад +1

    There is always a point where everything is alive then past that point you get more gain and then more compression and sometimes mush.

  • @mynameisjonas80
    @mynameisjonas80 2 года назад +1

    Great comparison! I think quiet vs cranked depends a lot what kind of music you play, and how you want the guitar to sit in the mix. In my experience, power tube breakup works best in combination with more moderate preamp gain. When the power amp gets hit with a signal that still has a lot of the dynamics intact, it gets to work its magic by smoothing out the peaks and fattening up the lower mids, making the amp feel more "alive" and easier to play. But when the preamp is designed to do that stuff on its own (like in modern high gain amps), there isn't much magic to work.
    It would be interesting to hear a comparison between cranked preamp / low master, and cranked master / low preamp, while trying to match the overall overdrive levels between the two settings.

    • @alanst.4417
      @alanst.4417 2 года назад

      Exactly, I was thinking something similar, although not that elaborate 😁

  • @marcpeiron_studio
    @marcpeiron_studio 2 года назад

    Really interesting, thanks for this video! BTW so happy you use Ownhammer again, so pleasant to my ears :)

  • @kornelwav
    @kornelwav 2 года назад

    Such a great comparison and instructive video. Thanks for sharing this.

  • @mystdeisanto9919
    @mystdeisanto9919 2 года назад +1

    Hey. Jon. Thanks for the informative video!
    I now realize that Recto sounds better if it cranked up, so it compress the fizzy top end a bit. For another high gain amp, I think they sounds best at quiet level.

    • @SonicDriveStudio
      @SonicDriveStudio  2 года назад

      Depends if you like the fizz or not. For me, with a Recto it's a part of that sound.

  • @mikesmith1290
    @mikesmith1290 2 года назад

    There’s a great vid I came across demonstrating the old Marshals without a gain knob. He ran a volt meter across the output transformer. When hitting power cords, the output transformer dropped from 400v to 240 or below. Basically overloading it, and drops out. . This is where the “tube crunch compression” really comes from

  • @Impractical_Engineer
    @Impractical_Engineer 2 года назад

    My super reverb is the sweetest dynamic sounding amp I've ever heard at bedroom levels.

  • @bradylasserre9320
    @bradylasserre9320 2 года назад

    Dude you always have really good riffs. I'm jealous I didn't write them lol.

  • @nekrovulpes
    @nekrovulpes 2 года назад +2

    Makes much more of a difference "in the room" with a real cab than in this kinda setup IMO, but in my experience you never have to "crank" the amp, it's just that there's a kind of minimum level where the amp really sounds held back and weak. As long as you get above that threshold, where the speakers get moving and the amp can breathe, you're fine, and there's no real benefit to going louder just for loudness' sake.

  • @TruthSurge
    @TruthSurge Год назад

    to my ears, loud master vol = less definition and clarity (all else being equal). But you could also turn the pre down and master up and get a diff tone and maybe up to where even the speakers barely clip so you get various sounds that aren't "better" but different. just how I hear it.

  • @battyfang4701
    @battyfang4701 Год назад

    1. Marshall: I prefer the lower level sound, which had more highs and transients. The louder level sounded more compressed and round.
    2. Orange. I preferred the louder level sounded full but still had the clarity over the lower level.
    3. Recto. I prefer the cranked level more. The buzziness of the recto was smoothed out when cranked.
    Like others stated. I think it would be very informative to do this with a mic'd cab. The IR's might not be capturing the speaker/s in a state where they are being driven as in a situation with a cranked amp. Speakers (in my opinion) are a huge component in the overall sound. I love your demos and keep up the good work.

  • @KeenanCrow
    @KeenanCrow 2 года назад

    Proved this to myself years ago with a reactive load box and IR loader. Sometimes power amp distortion sounds cool, especially in doom metal, but if you want a bright aggressive tone it’s easier to get at lower volumes.

    • @destavaiwira9997
      @destavaiwira9997 Год назад

      I was misled myself with so called heavy strings, heavy picks and loud amps.
      The fact, i need softer strings and pick, nad bedroom amp volume...

  • @dcthegreatest24
    @dcthegreatest24 Год назад

    The difference is miniscule on distorted tones, especially using IR's. Clean/edge of breakup-fuzz tones is where it really shines, through an in the room real speaker/cab. I have a vintage silverface super reverb 4x10 combo with an attenuator hooked to it and it gets quite nice in that category. Theres a huge difference in cranked and low volume with those types of tones.

  • @fjk1138
    @fjk1138 2 года назад

    I admit that I skipped right to the Dual Rec since I have one also, but I would say the quieter level was better overall. I record mine the same way. Playing excessively loud is probably overrated, especially for home recording purposes. Years ago I called Mesa directly and asked them what a "decent" volume level would be needed to a good recording volume for any of their amps (all pre-IRs and going direct, mind you) and I was told "not that loud - slightly loud is more than enough". So take that for what it's worth.

  • @OfficialSNMvids
    @OfficialSNMvids 2 года назад

    Cool experiment and glad to finally confirm that volumes don't necessarily matter. I agreed with all you said about all 3 three amps and especially enjoyed the quiet tones of the Mesa Recto! I have a few myself so I am a little bias ;) Great video \m/

  • @NickArcolla
    @NickArcolla 2 года назад

    That Orange amp sounds really good dude.

  • @roadfordays
    @roadfordays 2 года назад +3

    A lot of famous tones are recorded with Marshalls dimed at 10 (example, the Smashing Pumpkins' Siamese Dream tones). 4-5 on the master volume and the amp is barely starting to wake up. The fact that amp doesn't get louder and just gets more compressed is exactly the point. The idea is that the power amp saturation is replacing some of the need for pre-amp gain distortion. Been a long time since I was in a studio, but I always recorded with my DSL100 set to 10. At lower volumes it sounds like a pedal simulation of the real amp. Some mics can't handle the sound pressure level, and your engineer will likely have to set his console channel strip gain pretty low to avoid clipping the board, but if you want thick and gooey, that's the way to do it. There's also the aspect of the speakers themselves breaking up, distorting, and compressing the signal in different ways as the input signal gets louder, and with the sealed cabinet getting super loaded with pressure. Sometimes the tone we want comes from the amp and speaker both pushing way past their comfort zones. And worth noting that any speaker IR that was captured on a speaker that wasn't being pushed hard will not sound the same as an IR of a heavily loaded speaker, even if you crank up the amp feeding the IR. The IR needs to reflect what a speaker actually does when the amp is really hammering it.
    Of course, everyone's tastes are different. And thick and gooey might not be the desired tone, especially if you're playing technical fast metal. So some players need a tightly controlled signal. For them, playing quiet may be the way to go.

    • @luca4352
      @luca4352 2 года назад +2

      Great comment. I own a DSL50 myself and run the green channel on around 9 o clock for rhythm work. For everything lead related or overdubs, that need to stick out of the mix, running the master higher gives you everything you would want. More sustain, more gain, more feedback, more mids. When using real speakers of course..

  • @charleslowrey9309
    @charleslowrey9309 2 года назад

    Bought a Fryette PS100 to get the sound I wanted out of my 20 watt JCM 800 at low levels. It can keep the same sound at different volume levels now. Like the foot switchable effects loop on it as well.

  • @mrbubs
    @mrbubs 2 года назад

    HAAAYYY FWEEEEENNNS
    My favorite YT channel.

  • @mattvdh
    @mattvdh Год назад +1

    in terms of recording, it's pretty subtle, but I remember I saw the black dahlia murder live many years ago and they only played on like 2 or 3 on the volume, I guess to get a clearer sound and not distort the mics, and yeah it did sound clean but also kind of a annoyed me at how quiet and kind of flat it sounded. I think the sound really only opens up at about half way. I think this test kind of demonstrates that but only went to 4 on the volume so the power amp characteristics where just starting to come out but not really fully open. Interesting demo

  • @zachcd390119
    @zachcd390119 2 года назад +7

    A thought: What about the FEELING of louder volume levels? With the DI box and IRs, do you still play your speakers louder so you feel the vibrations in the ground and air? I find these vibrations to be very very satisfying when playing more aggressive music

    • @destavaiwira9997
      @destavaiwira9997 Год назад

      Play loud before first note: "my neighbor gonna be mad..."
      After first note: "I don't give a **** if I'm mad..."

  • @yowild9629
    @yowild9629 2 года назад +1

    power amp that uses push pull needs a 12ax7 to split the signal
    So such amp at louder levels pushes the power tubes phase inverter
    the sound you get isn’t quiet Power tubes break up ;)
    & + at louder level you must ad the speaker optimal loudness
    they tend to add their distortion . frequencies .
    its sensitivity its optimum volume of expression has a different braking point.
    & its the biggest change in sounds overall.
    I tend not to fall into such categories as Better or bad vs good.
    to me its a lauded term. If it sounds good its good.
    if it fits in . than better .
    Experiment with your gear & see where it takes you .
    The main point …
    Cool riff in Man ! love it !

  • @alegutierrezmusic
    @alegutierrezmusic 2 года назад

    I like the Mesa on loud settings and Marshall/Orange on the quiet side

  • @DadRockAndGuitars
    @DadRockAndGuitars 2 года назад +2

    I preferred them closer to the quiet side. I like the definition in the notes better. I run my Recto-Verb 25 quieter most of the time for recording and noticed you did as well on your demos. But when I'm just playing through my cab in the room, kind of hard to beat the feeling of cranking it up and moving some air 😅

  • @mediocremetalguy
    @mediocremetalguy 2 года назад +1

    I liked them both in high volume, and in quite volume. For a great tone with a little of both, i would play it somewhat in the middle of what you set them to. Kinda what you said😊
    Yeah it will be exiting with some other amps aswell. And same other amps i would like to hear in a similar test is amps I’ve got:
    1. Engl Fireball 25
    2. Marshall JVM410H
    3. EVH 5150 III 6l6 50w
    And some amps i’m looking for:
    4. Mesa Badlander el34 50w
    5. Laney IRT60H
    6. Bugera 6262 infinium
    Please consider my choices. They would be great interesting and quit different sounding overall👍🏻
    Thanx Jon for exiting vids that almost everytime is usefull (for me that is) and makes a different! Cheees from Sweden🇸🇪🍻🤘🏻

  • @hoomangoo
    @hoomangoo Год назад

    I dig the Engls, I have a 50w engl tube, but I feel like I rarely, if ever, see anyone else that has one

  • @MichaelSkor
    @MichaelSkor 2 года назад +1

    Love quiet for hi-gain sounds and pushing a master section to get dirty cleans and juicy crunches. Hello from Russia. ❤

  • @d.patrickbaker1096
    @d.patrickbaker1096 2 года назад +5

    Quiet is definitely better to my ears. I was just testing tones on my dual rectifier and was surprised at how much better it sounds at lower gain settings in a mix. Now I’ll have to try the volume too.

  • @Sayaka_saeki
    @Sayaka_saeki 17 часов назад

    I really love quite level for all of them

  • @IvansLV777
    @IvansLV777 2 года назад +3

    Orange as usually awesome. In terms of amps that can show that difference between quite and loud I think that need to think about sweetspot that you mentioned. I think quality and taste of sound means more than just loudness. Overcompressed amps sound lifeless. Also need to mention that in a different mix(different style) it may sound better as too compressed, who knows. Thank you for awesome video!

  • @MangoMeoww
    @MangoMeoww 2 года назад +1

    The volume knob on tube amps should be called "power" and not "volume". The tubes need power to function and do their job, that's what people mean when they say "the tubes opens up and can breath".
    Where this threshold is for "enough" power certainly isn't "cranked" unless we're talking about a plexi. You don't need to crank your amp to 10 for it to sound good. But if your tubes aren't getting enough power then the tubes can't do their job properly.
    This doesn't mean that playing at volume 1 sounds objectively bad though. Nice video! I also agree people confuse louder volume with sounding better.

  • @TheGgreen100
    @TheGgreen100 2 года назад

    Great video.
    If you want clarity and articulation, go quiet.
    If you want to smooth out the highs and emphasize the mids, along with smearing things up just a bit, go loud. Nice!

  • @stubrakon9683
    @stubrakon9683 2 года назад

    Great work! All the sounds are good. I'd like the orange. 👍😃😎🤘

  • @MrSneakyPants
    @MrSneakyPants Год назад

    Thanks Jon. Great video as usual.

  • @TheZotman5
    @TheZotman5 2 года назад +1

    Great video! I seemed to like the Orange and the Mesa at low volume, but the Marshal sounded better loud. I find Marshals kind of ice pick like at low volume, which explains why I was never able to jive with my DSL40C.

  • @jasoncrump1886
    @jasoncrump1886 2 года назад +1

    Appreciate your vids brother. I play my EVH 50watt 6l6 at bedroom volume daily and I think it sounds good . I don't get a chance to crank it to often so not sure if it's much better loud or not. Lol

  • @louaguado995
    @louaguado995 Год назад

    I noticed a difference on the Marshall. It was fizzy on lower volumes, more mids on louder volumes. But an adjustment on the e.q. would have evened it out.

  • @adissabovic
    @adissabovic 2 года назад

    Killer rifs, man! 🤘💪

  • @zeevshaff
    @zeevshaff Год назад

    Best thing I can say about the mark V 25 is the treble.. completely changes the sound (lead channel)

  • @davedobson9801
    @davedobson9801 2 года назад

    I prefer them quiet. Great video! I've been experimenting with my amps at home using an attenuator and without, and I'm actually feeling like the attenuator is not needed. As long as the volume control allows for a quiet level.

  • @joesfathead
    @joesfathead 2 года назад

    You convinced me to buy an attenuator for the Mesa that I sold years ago.

  • @GoreSamuel
    @GoreSamuel Год назад

    I just discovered your channel and I think it's awesome. A lot of helpful content

  • @garyz0611
    @garyz0611 2 года назад

    You should make this a series

  • @immyownbestfriend9338
    @immyownbestfriend9338 Год назад

    first time in a while i took the bait, very cool video!

  • @growlergator
    @growlergator 2 года назад +1

    This test should have included a Marshall 1959 100w Plexi because this is the most common amp in late1960’s to early 1980’s rock music and it is the amp where volume has the largest impact on gain and tone. It is the amp that really gave us the idea to “Crank it to 10 to make it sound good!”

    • @barrymurphy5548
      @barrymurphy5548 2 года назад

      Well as it so happens, recently I was fortunate enough to be able to experiment with a mates 71 100w Superbass and 72 100w Superlead, I brought along my Freyette PS 100 to show him how much he was missing by using a €40 PPMIV mod in the Superbass instead of getting 'those power tubes cooking' ... 6 hours later, I had to hold my hands up and admit the difference was so subtle, that you could easily compensate with simple EQ pedal or in this case dialling in a tiny bit more 'depth' on the PS 100. So yeah, I was pretty stunned to say the least, and also due to the location of the amps, we were able to record them running full throttle without any attenuation ... and the difference was just a small bit of 'depth' eq away ... which you would normally take out of a band/track mix in reality, and definitely cut for any hard rock/metal riffs. The whole thing shut me up thats for sure !! I'd still take either of those amps over a low wattage modern version though !! 😜

  • @jimbobdergroe9897
    @jimbobdergroe9897 2 года назад

    Great riffs as always man big respect💪👍😎

  • @facundonahuelporro3192
    @facundonahuelporro3192 2 года назад +1

    interesting. but only using IR's, if you use a 2x12 or any cab, there's a point where the cab pushes the air in a different way. as you probably know, you need certain power to drive a speaker, so probably the myth of LOUD is more about the cab than the amp itself. but it's also true (at least to my ears) that theres a sweet spot for the amp and the cab. usually an amp on full throttle will not sound as good. Love your videos, btw.

  • @alphanumeric1529
    @alphanumeric1529 Год назад

    To really sort this out I'd like to see:
    1. Test the head at quiet levels with your load box into an IR.
    2. Test the head at quiet levels with your load box into a mic'ed up cab.
    3. Test the head at quiet levels without your load box into an IR.
    4. Test the head at quiet levels without your load box into a mic'ed up cab.
    5. Test the head at loud levels with your load box into an IR.
    6. Test the head at loud levels with your load box into a mic'ed up cab.
    7. Test the head at loud levels without your load box into an IR.
    8. Test the head at loud levels without your load box into a mic'ed up cab.
    That would be a full, comprehensive test, really revealing the impact the power amp section is having, and potential impact speaker compression/distortion is having in the dimed, or uber loud amp setting!

  • @LucasLeCompteMusic
    @LucasLeCompteMusic 2 года назад +3

    The Recto Solo Head sounds a lot better at lower volume. Marshall and Orange had more bit and Mids when turned up. I think you just have to find the sweet spot volume wise on any amp. Video proves "louder" isnt always better when it comes to an amp.

  • @azzazelo
    @azzazelo 2 года назад

    I mean both have applications, and you can adjust presence and eq at louder levels if you want it to match.

  • @louaguado995
    @louaguado995 Год назад

    If you're using a cabinet instead of an i.r. you do get a little resonance from the wood vibrating at higher volumes. Just like a 112 vs a 412 cabinet varies using the same amp. I know the Marshall dsl series has a capacitor on the master volume that brightens them up at lower volumes, most mod's I've seen are of disconnecting that bright cap'

  • @sqlb3rn
    @sqlb3rn 2 года назад +1

    I like the Orange pushed, it has more hi mid bite

  • @rhitosparsha
    @rhitosparsha 2 года назад +5

    About time someone made one of these! The little isolated sections were really helpful as well. As someone who has never owned a "real" amp, the differences seemed in line with what I experienced with good amp simulation software. I preferred the lower Master settings on all three, however I believe the higher master settings on the SC20H could work for a smooth lead tone. Also was great to hear a demo of the Moabi Custom pack as well.
    One thing I noticed while watching reviews of smaller amps: people seemed surprised that they deliver such loudness levels even at lower Master volume settings. I wonder if it's possible to spread this change in loudness and tone over a larger range of rotation of the knob, as opposed to the first few digits.
    Also, on an unrelated note: Have you ever shared any DI tracks of your recordings? It'd be awesome if you could do something like that, especially for the pickup comparison videos!

    • @singleproppilot
      @singleproppilot 2 года назад +1

      I have an EVH 5150 III 50 watt, which does not come with a master volume control. Its usable volume range for home use is the tiny space from 0 to 1 on the dial. Between 1 and 3 is for rehearsal and stage use. Anything more than 3 is insane, and above halfway the sound of the amp falls apart as the bass frequencies pile up and it becomes a flubby mess. I think this is an intentional consequence of the way amps are marketed and sold. If you play it in a music store and it’s plenty loud at 1, you buy it with confidence that it will always be loud enough for anything you want to do with it. It’s the same psychology that leads some people to buy a 180 mph muscle car when they can’t drive it any faster than my compact car. If they put potentiometers in it with a more reasonable taper that made the control more usable, you might think it won’t be loud enough.

    • @fallenshallrise
      @fallenshallrise Год назад

      @@singleproppilot Interesting and yes I can confirm that the JCM800 and other similar master volume amps I own are the same way. Like nothing until it cuts in decently loud at just under 1, then finite movements after that get you up to band volume at around 3, after that nothing much happens, sometimes just some gross blocky distortion added in. It might be the pots, it might just be how we hear things. 1 watt is quite loud already.

    • @2Below5150
      @2Below5150 Год назад

      @@singleproppilot The EVH 5153 50 watts absolutely comes with a master volume control. I own two 5153s. The original 50w and the 50w Stealth. The pre-amp gain control is labeled as the GAIN knob. The post pre-amp gain / master volume knob is labeled VOLUME. All versions of the 5150 are master volume amps. From the original Peavy 5150 through the EVH 5153s. Even the lunchbox version is a master volume amp.

    • @singleproppilot
      @singleproppilot Год назад

      @@2Below5150 By that older definition, you are correct. I was referring to the more modern definition of “master volume”, which is a control on some multi-channel amps that controls the volume of all channels together, without having to touch each individual channel’s volume control.

  • @DanTheDiggler
    @DanTheDiggler 2 года назад

    Thanks for doing this! Way LESS difference than I tought. Subtle shades of how much compression and loudness one prefers. Could probably be tweaked with other parameters. Cheers

  • @Robsi60
    @Robsi60 2 года назад

    I have a DSL5CR set to 0.5W due to circumstances. I have just tried to set it louder which I did not before. Just my opinion loud means more bass and quiet more clear. More heights. Many, many told me to crank it up, but I have no choice taking my neighbours in account.

  • @martin_schwarz
    @martin_schwarz 2 года назад

    I remember in the late 1970s the rhythm players used the 100W amps to get a cleaner tone at high volumes while the soloists preferred the 50W because of the earlier overdrive. Later everybody started to think louder is better... I used a Twin for clean and 2 cranked Pro Reverbs for overdrive, but back then we mostly played open air...

  • @leftofpunk
    @leftofpunk 2 года назад +1

    Wow, that Orange was just consistent and reliable. I prefer the lower more "open" sounds.