I notice you have the tone dimed on the Panama. It can be on the darker side. I may try a tube swap.not all amps HAVE that many controls.......can I find the sweet spot on these????????????
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actually I have ---its ALL SWEET SPOT buwahahahahaha
That is another thing I found interesting. I was waiting for him to say that, but he did not. He presumably believes that the point where the pot is most responsive is static for each. This is also something I will look for.Not sure. Interesting though...
Presuming many amps have highly interactive controls, where you start and what order you go about the controls would affect what he did in the video. Probably?
I think the videos assume a sense of independence between the parameters and that the most responsive section of the pot is the best section to be in. I doubt the validity of this theory, but it is so easy to test that I must!Yeah I wasn't too impressed with the video but I do think that starting with the lows and highs before the mids is sensible
Then you have the whole issue of how 'presence' affects tone, 'bright' switches, etc ... not to mention the 'resonance' control on Peavey 5150/6505 series amps (although I mainly use that to adjust for different cabs). Resonance is quite interactive with the low EQ in my experience.
I think the videos assume a sense of independence between the parameters and that the most responsive section of the pot is the best section to be in. I doubt the validity of this theory, but it is so easy to test that I must!
Finding an amps sweet spot
1. Get a Marshall
2. turn all the knobs to 10
3. ROCK THE FOOK OUT
your welcome --- buwahahhahhahaaa----:dood:
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I'm gonna have to give this a try.No idea if this is valid, but certainly an interesting approach. I will definitely give it a try.