Okay.... not sure if I should be worried or not.... but I concur. T75 and again Swamp Thang. Manowar was good.... just liked the other two better. And I think what did it for me.... and I hesitate to use the word "clean".... maybe "crisp" is a better term. All of them from mids up sounded great. I think what did it for me was when you played the lower strings. There was a clarity that wasn't with the other speakers.Yes.
I want that Amp. It sounded great with all of them! lol.
This time I liked the Manowar T-75 and Swamp Thang
I must be rubbing on you!Okay.... not sure if I should be worried or not.... but I concur.
I did not catch that first read. Shows how the brain works. My mind read OFF. Had I comprehended what you actually typed and had just taken a drink..... there'd have been a spray job.Off. OFF! Rubbing off on you.
Lolololol!!! Some typos are too funny to edit

Channeling a little bit of Adrian here I seeI must be rubbing on you!
Personally I'm a little reserved in my judgment here simply because we can see the mic moving around between speaker changes. I can't tell how much tonal change is due to the speaker swap or the differences between mic positions.This one with the Marshall JVM and tuned Drop B
Does it change any speaker choices for you guys?
Personally I'm a little reserved in my judgment here simply because we can see the mic moving around between speaker changes. I can't tell how much tonal change is due to the speaker swap or the differences between mic positions.
Oh it's not a complaint at all!Fair enough, but just know that I do understand mic placement pretty well and have spent countless hours studying and testing it for my own knowledge.
I even taught an audio recording class at the high school for about ten years teaching students how to use mics properly etc.
I wouldn't say I'm a studio engineer guru or anything, but in all my clips I set the mic either dead center or most commonly right at the sweet spot - edge of dust cap. My cabs are marked where to put the mic for each speaker. So I do try to get the most common tones recorded in a semi-scientific manner.
Ha ha roger that. I say trust your ears and fire away.Oh it's not a complaint at all!
Pretty much how I do it too and I'm far less educated about it than you are!
I just know that in my own limited experiences I have noticed seemingly tiny things make pretty significant changes in the way things sound. Of course, in that instance I'm usually not doing any type of speaker shootout or anything either, I'm not listening for differences between speakers, I'm listening for differences in other things. And even then I question whether or not I should trust my own ears lol!