Joined: 02 Nov 2012 Posts: 4945 Location: Around the corner
Posted: Thu Mar 01, 2018 6:30 am Post subject:
Your amp sounds like poop because it's a 12 - 15 watt amp that sounds best at 50-80% of it's maximum volume and you need to crank it up to the max to compete with other louder amp
I only briefly played a smaller combo version of Mustang and while I liked it I generally don't like modelling amps/processor. Don't you have a bigger solid state amp too? Try to compare Mustang to it. If you like Mustang better get a Mustang. I'd go with a used Peavey Bandit, but again I'd buy it to use with pedals and pedals don't work well with modelling amps like Mustang _________________
I have an excelsior and a mustang III. Just don't know which i like better. Playing in my band, i like more the mustang for his loudness and versability. Mustangs are just fine amps. _________________ skullcat guitars
There probably are better amps to think about than the Excelsior.
I'm not sure about the Mustangs. Everyone has good things to say about them, my only experience is the few that we had in school and they broke in no time at all.
There might be other amps to consider. Although I suppose, if it sounds good, then fuck it, go for it.
EDIT: I think it was the Mustang I amps we had. And the abuse they get in a classroom is probably an unfair way to judge them. At the same time, I like to think that this is a useful way to judge how roadworthy amps are. A year in a classroom is probably equivalent to ten years of normal use. _________________
I put my mustang 1 inside an big old 1950s radio cabinet I found on the side of the road. I run my turntable into a pre-amp, in ton the aux in Jack on the mustang, bought the foot switch for it that I run out from under the radio cabinet so the amp is totally out of sight.
The way it's used I have 2 channel guitar clean/dirty at one set volume on the amp and I can dial up the turntable volume with the pre-amp.
So all the fancy modeling bullshit with it doesn't even get used because the entire amp is buried inside this massive radio cabinet.
But it sounds great with the records so I keep using it in this fashion
I have one of the Mustang heads. It doesn't really push sound in a big bassy way like tubes will, but it sounds fucking great and the amount of settings you can fiddle with is insane.
so back before my Son was born in 2010 me and some guys from work would get together and jam in his basement.
over about 6 months of saturday practices and had about 10 songs worked out.
This video was taken 2 days before Liam was born. It was the last time we all played together.
fast forward 8 years my kids are old enough now to tell them to go chill out upstairs with head phones on for 2 hours while dad fucks up shit in the basement.
guitar player were in immediately. bass player Nate moved to Austin.
Love playing with guitar player Adam. we bounce ideas off each other really well. he's into like tom petty covers n shit and i try to bring the rock out in him.
so same dudes. looking for bass player.
excuse the shit audio its a 2010 cell phone recording a band with like 10 practices playing 15 minutes of original tunes
Joined: 14 Jan 2008 Posts: 10411 Location: Nr. Basinggrad, UK
Posted: Sat Mar 03, 2018 8:13 am Post subject:
George wrote:
Not getting into this. Established "fact" that big ass tube amp output transformers sound big and more bassy than digital. See ya
The amount of power you can get out of a transformer depends on the amount of iron in your output transformer core and frequency, which is why bass output transformers need to be bigger to extend the rated power down to the low end. A balanced solid-state output stage can theoretically go down to DC (as used in servo amplifiers) which transformer-output amps can't so it isn't that tube amps are intrinsically bassier; there must be other factors at play if that is your experience.
Not getting into this. Established "fact" that big ass tube amp output transformers sound big and more bassy than digital. See ya
The amount of power you can get out of a transformer depends on the amount of iron in your output transformer core and frequency, which is why bass output transformers need to be bigger to extend the rated power down to the low end. A balanced solid-state output stage can theoretically go down to DC (as used in servo amplifiers) which transformer-output amps can't so it isn't that tube amps are intrinsically bassier; there must be other factors at play if that is your experience.
Yes, the key factor is the digital guitar amps available on the market.
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