|
drippinglass (August 30, 2008 at 4:10 am)
Awsome! Keep up the good work Justine.
rennurx (August 28, 2008 at 11:09 am)
Justin,
First thank you for you contribution to guitar playing.
Would you consider doing a vid on hows the best way to interface the effects pedals through the amplifier maythis is an advance amp vid. Using the effects loop and prefered arrangements.
Thxs.
Steve
theriggermortis2400 (August 28, 2008 at 9:19 am)
I skipped to 6 minutes and HE'S STILL TALKING >=O I'm sick of these reviews! Why not just play with a few different settings and give a link to the FUCKING SPECS THAT WE CAN READ IF WE'RE BOTHERED ABOUT THEM! Most people just want to hear the SOUND!
JotaMcCready (August 26, 2008 at 4:53 am)
Just shut Up & Play!!!!
DrBones666 (August 24, 2008 at 1:33 pm)
You're just a hater.
Piss off.
puddleduck8051 (August 24, 2008 at 12:04 pm)
..Breaking up is the addition of overtones which were created in the gain stage and power stage of the tube amplifier (additonal frequencies which weren't in the original signal)...This is more relevant than a meaningless statement about frequency equalization.
puddleduck8051 (August 24, 2008 at 12:01 pm)
Wow aren't you Mr Mature bashing my race. Sound Engineer says my degree and how I make a living. You're alone in your pathetic little non-tubed world. I can't take anything you say seriously because A) You talk shit...and B)because of your original statement 'Warmth is just frequency equalization'. And now you post more irrelevant information that in the guitar world means very little. Go play with your transistors you tool. And yes warmth is mostly relevant to the term 'Breaking up'.
DrBones666 (August 24, 2008 at 3:25 am)
Well aren't you special? Sound engineer. Sure you are. How convenient. I'll bet you got qualified by Googling "audio warmth."
Too bad you can't make your point without being a Poindexter.
New Zealand, where men are men and sheep are nervous.
DrBones666 (August 24, 2008 at 3:20 am)
So warmth is breaking up. Hmmm... talk about misinformed.
Transient times, transistor hash and harmonics all weigh into the "warmth" equation. EQ has the ability to restrict harmonics and hash and shape the sound giving it warmth. Other degradations can add to it also.
Tubes suck. >-D
puddleduck8051 (August 24, 2008 at 3:07 am)
Also Drbones, have do you know anything about harmonics or overtones? You may be a smart cookie to do with electronics, but you really don't seem to know anything about sound. I'm a qualified sound engineer and can tell from one of your posts that you know little about this topic. |