Do you ever feel let down by an amp that NEEDS a boost or OD to sound good?

Tbh I do have big beef with amps that tend to need a boost to sound their best. Although I’m probably more forgiving than some (I never boosted my roadster and it was fine)

My main problem is that I do so much switching between ā€œpretty cleanā€ and ā€œrip your head off high gainā€ that a boost presents its challenges



HOWEVER

I hate to suddenly be a Klone nutswinger but holy shit talk about a game changer…. The archer ikon is possibly one of the most elite purchases I’ve made in years over all….

The way I have it set up is just a ā€œclean tone enhancerā€ if I happen to have it on, and the if it’s engaged when switching to high gain it does the boost thing in spades. Particular standout with my badlander :love
 
It's never bothered me, I actually prefer to 'finish off' a tone with one, either to shape the tone a bit going in or make it more friendly to play, but it's such an individual choice thing that I'm perfectly fine using my own preferred pedals over something built-in.
 
Some people want magic black boxes that do everything for them. A turn-key solution to the amazing tight high gain rockstar tone of their dreams, but with no scary thinking required.

What difference does it make if the part of your sound that tightens and/or compresses the signal at the earliest stages in the amp come from inside the amp right after the input jack, or right before it in a drive pedal? There is no difference, not in any real practical sense. Being against boosting is a strange idea perpetuated by people who have weird fetishes for some nebulous idea of tonal "purity" (as if that even means anything) and who would rather worship some singular idealized piece of gear they can put on a pedestal.

The way I see it is that you can try to get lucky with an amp that uses filtering and extra gain staging that just so happens to fit your guitar, cab, and playing exactly right for your ear and hope the rest of the amp also sounds how you want as well, or you can buy a relatively unfiltered amp with a core tone you really like, to which you can apply your own boost as you have chosen.

Of course boosting isn't mandatory, obviously, but to go so far as to be actively opposed to it or any other tone shaping tool out of some misguided sense of purity is just silly.
 
Some people want magic black boxes that do everything for them. A turn-key solution to the amazing tight high gain rockstar tone of their dreams, but with no scary thinking required.

What difference does it make if the part of your sound that tightens and/or compresses the signal at the earliest stages in the amp come from inside the amp right after the input jack, or right before it in a drive pedal? There is no difference, not in any real practical sense.
You’re painting with broad strokes here, but there can be significant differences between the boost techniques employed by amps vs external pedals. Sure, some amp circuits use diodes like a tubescreamer or SD-1, but others are adding additional 12ax7s and operating at voltages that aren’t typical in pedals. There can be big headroom and dynamics differences between those approaches.

Being against boosting is a strange idea perpetuated by people who have weird fetishes for some nebulous idea of tonal "purity" (as if that even means anything) and who would rather worship some singular idealized piece of gear they can put on a pedestal.
I’d argue it’s far less likely people are chasing purity than they are simply finding the tone they are looking for without needing additional boosts or drives.

It’s not 1980 anymore, we’ve learned some things about creating more responsive high gain amps.
 
The way I see it is that you can try to get lucky with an amp that uses filtering and extra gain staging that just so happens to fit your guitar, cab, and playing exactly right for your ear and hope the rest of the amp also sounds how you want as well, or you can buy a relatively unfiltered amp with a core tone you really like, to which you can apply your own boost as you have chosen.
Exactly. Good amp gives good core sound simple as it is.

Different pickups, different styles exist and boosting doesn't apply to everything. No need to limit the amp.
 
I don’t really like boosting high gain amps. If they need ā€œtighteningā€ just to function that’s a fault in the design.
It's same than not liking eq pedals. If amps need further equalisation then all amps are faulty by the design. But are they?

They are just for flexibility; situational tools for all kind of needs. Making it possible to play doom metal with looser bass or thrash metal with tighter bass with the pretty same amp. All you need is just one or two pedal instead of buying 2 different amps.
 
Is it just me???

I can't help but feel this way sometimes. Historically, I didn't like using boosts or OD pedals. I was a amp purist - if the amp couldn't sound hype as fuck without augmenting, I wasn't interested.

I can't think of the number of amps I flogged because I was being an idiot!!

I'm much more pliant when it comes to boosting amps now. In fact, I really enjoy it. It is quite fun to compare the SD-1, Tumnus Deluxe, and a tubescreamer.

Still.... I do look at how much my Diezel VH4 and Orange Rockerverb cost, and I feel this sense of entitlement that I know is not at all deserved! My amp should sound fucking epic without this godamn pedal! It cost way too much!
I have several amps and none of them can fully satisfy me 100% with out the need of some kind of boost. There is no one perfect amp, not even a Dumble.
 
It's same than not liking eq pedals. If amps need further equalisation then all amps are faulty by the design. But are they?

They are just for flexibility; situational tools for all kind of needs. Making it possible to play doom metal with looser bass or thrash metal with tighter bass with the pretty same amp. All you need is just one or two pedal instead of buying 2 different amps.
If it needs an EQ to function properly? That’s a problem. It better be a cheap amp.
 
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Tbh I do have big beef with amps that tend to need a boost to sound their best. Although I’m probably more forgiving than some (I never boosted my roadster and it was fine)

My main problem is that I do so much switching between ā€œpretty cleanā€ and ā€œrip your head off high gainā€ that a boost presents its challenges



HOWEVER

I hate to suddenly be a Klone nutswinger but holy shit talk about a game changer…. The archer ikon is possibly one of the most elite purchases I’ve made in years over all….

The way I have it set up is just a ā€œclean tone enhancerā€ if I happen to have it on, and the if it’s engaged when switching to high gain it does the boost thing in spades. Particular standout with my badlander :love


I’ve been preaching about my Griffin Analog Chiron that is some exact tolerance spec klone, it’s literally like a magic box for me. I never knew anything about klons other than they go for ridiculous amounts of money, and I never really heard of high gain guys using them, thought they were more some sort of creamy overdrive for blues players.. but this thing just adds the perfect amount of everything without really changing the amps character at all, and best of all gives all my amps that kind of iic+ liquidy bounce that is so addictive. i can understand now why real ones have the hype they do and go for ridiculous amounts of money
 
If it needs an EQ to function properly? That’s a problem. It better be a cheap amp.

I mean, amp’s having an EQ right on the front are there for a reason. :idk

While I strongly prefer not to use an additional EQ pedal, if I got an amp I love but I’m on the fence about the speakers it’s coming out of I might slap an EQ in the loop to shape it before sorting out the ideal speaker for it. Or if you get into a room with a stage that’s boomy AF, it’d be kind of silly to change the entire amp rather than just EQ’ing it right there.

And considering the amount of EQ that gets applied to amps in mixes, I think the only way I’d agree with ā€œfunction properlyā€ is if the only way to get the core tone from the amp was to EQ it, outside of that, they get EQ’d all over the place.
 
It's same than not liking eq pedals. If amps need further equalisation then all amps are faulty by the design. But are they?


its not even totally about the amp.. you can have one amp and a few different guitars and cabs, maybe one cab has a slight resonance at 200hz or something, or a guitar that has just slightly too much low mids and sounds a little boxy, id much rather throw an eq in the loop and fix the problem than changing speakers or pickups that may just cause problems with another piece of gear. if youre recording this is all gonna be done at the board or in post anyway, id rather do it at the source
 
its not even totally about the amp.. you can have one amp and a few different guitars and cabs, maybe one cab has a slight resonance at 200hz or something, or a guitar that has just slightly too much low mids and sounds a little boxy, id much rather throw an eq in the loop and fix the problem than changing speakers or pickups that may just cause problems with another piece of gear. if youre recording this is all gonna be done at the board or in post anyway, id rather do it at the source
It was just an example to point out that needing further tweaking (like extra tightness, fine tuning etc) is not always about the amp quality

When I still had active pickups I never boosted them (with hi gains). I boosted JB to get rid of bass floppiness (later used eq for that). Now im boosting custom 5, i can just add more gain from amp -its a Fireball 100- but I want to keep medium output's compression and saturation for dynamic feeling. If i give more gain from fireball for extra kick it compresses and saturates more than the pedal. Because its not designed for that specific guitar/ pickup combination.

Yes probably engl fe special edition would fix all by itself but it costs 3 times more than fireball. All i need is one transparent od pedal which costs 100 euros max.
 
I mean, amp’s having an EQ right on the front are there for a reason. :idk

While I strongly prefer not to use an additional EQ pedal, if I got an amp I love but I’m on the fence about the speakers it’s coming out of I might slap an EQ in the loop to shape it before sorting out the ideal speaker for it. Or if you get into a room with a stage that’s boomy AF, it’d be kind of silly to change the entire amp rather than just EQ’ing it right there.

And considering the amount of EQ that gets applied to amps in mixes, I think the only way I’d agree with ā€œfunction properlyā€ is if the only way to get the core tone from the amp was to EQ it, outside of that, they get EQ’d all over the place.
So, you agree with me then?
 
I’ve been preaching about my Griffin Analog Chiron that is some exact tolerance spec klone, it’s literally like a magic box for me. I never knew anything about klons other than they go for ridiculous amounts of money, and I never really heard of high gain guys using them, thought they were more some sort of creamy overdrive for blues players.. but this thing just adds the perfect amount of everything without really changing the amps character at all, and best of all gives all my amps that kind of iic+ liquidy bounce that is so addictive. i can understand now why real ones have the hype they do and go for ridiculous amounts of money

My only experience with a Klon has been the Fractal model, but this seems to be on par with everything I’ve experienced with it. It became my most-used boost for high gain amps due to not adding mid spikes and having a slower ramp-up of dirt, allowing for a bit more fine tuning. Definitely anxious to get into some physical Klones as time goes on, though.
 
If it needs an EQ to function properly? That’s a problem. It better be a cheap amp.
If we’re talking about an amp that needs a boost or EQ to be useful at all, as in making any sound, then I might agree with you. I’m not really sure how literal the thread title is.

I’m reading the comments as being tilted more heavily towards ā€œneed an EQ or boost to be used in X contextā€ as our use cases all vary so much.

A 100w Superlead will be useless to a metal guy without an overdrive, unless of course he can dime it. Similarly, that 5150 head probably isn’t going to satisfy the blues lawyer.
 
A 100w Superlead will be useless to a metal guy without an overdrive, unless of course he can dime it. Similarly, that 5150 head probably isn’t going to satisfy the blues lawyer.
Well, what I’m saying is if you can’t turn up the gain of a high gain amp without it sounding like poop and it needs a boost or EQ to make it work properly in those high gain situations, then is it really a high gain amp?
 
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