why solid state amps suck

As has been said, SS amps don't all sound bad, and tube amps don't all sound good. But...(and it's a biggie for me)...I have yet to play a SS amp that FEELS like a tube amp. I know its an intangible, and there is not evidence-based criteria to compare them to each other by that I am aware of, but I just never find SS amps rewarding to play in the same way a well-designed tube amp is, no matter if the tone is good or not. The feel alone makes me play better, and really at the end of the day that's what its about.
 
What's interesting to me is that we have sounds we strive for and most of the time it is a tube amp sound, realistically. That said, some SS can sound very tubeish. Even my cheap Peavey Studio Pro Transtube sounded remarkably good through decent speakers. The little Yamaha THR sounds amazing and I really like my Katana.
The JMD starts to blur the lines.
As long as it sounds good, I don't care how it gets there. TheTaurus pedal amp has one 12AX7 and it appears to use half the circuit in pre and half in power somehow. Sounds killer. I call it SS cause it is analog and 1 tube does not make 60 watts
EDIT _ yes the feel is different. Except the JMD as it is tube power section.
 
As has been said, SS amps don't all sound bad, and tube amps don't all sound good. But...(and it's a biggie for me)...I have yet to play a SS amp that FEELS like a tube amp. I know its an intangible, and there is not evidence-based criteria to compare them to each other by that I am aware of, but I just never find SS amps rewarding to play in the same way a well-designed tube amp is, no matter if the tone is good or not. The feel alone makes me play better, and really at the end of the day that's what its about.
Do you thinkbyou could tell the difference in a blind test? Honest question :)

I don't think I could. Depending on what amps I was comparing of course.
 
As has been said, SS amps don't all sound bad, and tube amps don't all sound good. But...(and it's a biggie for me)...I have yet to play a SS amp that FEELS like a tube amp. I know its an intangible, and there is not evidence-based criteria to compare them to each other by that I am aware of, but I just never find SS amps rewarding to play in the same way a well-designed tube amp is, no matter if the tone is good or not. The feel alone makes me play better, and really at the end of the day that's what its about.
Have you played a Quilter?
 
Do you thinkbyou could tell the difference in a blind test? Honest question :)

I don't think I could. Depending on what amps I was comparing of course.
If you are doing a listening test I would say absolutely not. If you are playing I think you could depending on the amp. The way a non-master volume Marshall interacts with a guitar, especially as volume goes up, I don't think you could duplicate.
 
Do you thinkbyou could tell the difference in a blind test? Honest question :)

I don't think I could. Depending on what amps I was comparing of course.

At high volume, yes. I have no doubt, because that's where the biggest differences manifest themselves. At practice levels the line is blurrier, but I did trade in my SS/modeling practice amps for a 1-watt Marshall tube amp and although it could be placebo effect I find that it's much nicer to play and has a bit of the "pushback" I was missing with the SS stuff. So I'm happy.
 
If you are doing a listening test I would say absolutely not. If you are playing I think you could depending on the amp. The way a non-master volume Marshall interacts with a guitar, especially as volume goes up, I don't think you could duplicate.
I couldn't tell my Quilter from a tube amp I think. Or maybe I could if I could play loud enough that I could push thebpower tubes over the edge. But the Quikter has some magic limiter-thingy-madgick that makes it pretty hard to tell it's not a tube amp.
 
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