Shredder777
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I was quite surprised how much of an effect they have.
Running Fractal models w/ the cab/poweramp disabled into the Return of any of my tube amps brings varying results. I thought for sure a Plexi into the return of a Mesa Electra Dyne would sound like a big ass Plexi, but it sounded dark and muddy regardless of the preamp settings, any Mesa’s into the Return of the same amp….sounded like Mesa’s and absolutely badass.
Between my Shiva, Electra Dyne and 5153, the 5153 has the most transparent power section. Considering the Electra Dyne uses a fair amount of power amp distortion, I’m not surprised by the results because the amp was obviously designed with some color from the power section. And while the Shiva isn’t really getting much/any dirt from the power section, that amp behaves very differently depending on where the Master is set. With the EVH relying on preamp gain and as much headroom as possible for high gain, I’m not surprised it’s a bit ‘cleaner’ sounding.
No, but that module sounds great with any good power amp. In fact I think it's my favourite of the Synergy line.If you get a Synergy Uber module and play it through a 5150 power amp, are you getting the Uber experience?
That's because the poweramp is designed around a particular power tube. Change from say an amp designed for 6L6s to EL34s, and you change the overall behavior of the circuit, even if those tubes are biased accordingly.And I know there was some popular discussion at least within the last year about power tubes allegedly not making a difference but that is total bullshit. Swapping out power tubes in amps that are capable of that makes significant differences
Agree… A lot of folks have misunderstandings about how power tubes operate and how they are contributing to the sound. They *can* be a big deal or just subtle. It depends on the amp. Most people put far too much stock in tube type, f.ex.The key is the filtering that is applied to different power sections, as well as the transformers design and quality. That makes more of a difference than the power tube themselves. Marshall is a good example of that, they had power amps with EL34s, 6550s, KT66s and 5881s and they all sound like Marshalls.
That's not to say power tubes don't make a difference, they certainly do, but they're secondary to other aspects of the power amp.
This is a great post from Cliff about this topic:That's because the poweramp is designed around a particular power tube. Change from say an amp designed for 6L6s to EL34s, and you change the overall behavior of the circuit, even if those tubes are biased accordingly.
According to Rob Robinette (who has a wonderful site on tube amp circuits): True pentodes such as the EL34 and EL84 flow more screen current and therefore offer up more distortion than beam tetrode power tubes like the 6V6 and 6L6.
So how do you make an amp designed for 6L6 tubes behave the same with EL34s? You'd alter the resistors and capacitors used to control the tube behavior. But many of the amps that just let you slap in any octal tubes don't do this, so by using different tubes you have altered the circuit behavior.
You can find for example Marshall based amps built around every power tube known to man, but they still sound like Marshalls. Maybe a slightly different flavor of it compared to the common EL34 variants, but not a major one.