I actually enjoyed that thread! You made those teasing clips and got dozens of possible research questions

You did use solid core wire, correct?
Looking forward to your next built.
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I actually enjoyed that thread! You made those teasing clips and got dozens of possible research questions
talbany wrote: ↑Wed Jun 13, 2018 8:32 ami was looking at this amp sometime ago,and wondering if the preamp wiring was reflecting more or less the same principle you are talking about...
Dumble has been known to influence positive feedback into a circuit through the routing of certain wires in close proximity to one another...Like Gil mentions these practices have the tendency to make the amp unstable. The trick is knowing which ones you can play with and which ones you can't
BTW.Don't ask which ones go where..I have no idea.![]()
Tony
I probably would have phrased it slightly differently, but yep, that' the one.
I hear you. It's hard to say why things are the way they are, when it comes to amps that is. I remember that of the amps I built, some just sounded more to my liking than others no matter what I did. I could make changes to all of them, and maybe for the better. But the better ones always ended up being the better ones, no matter what. I'm sure the same happens with Dumbles. LC's Dumble's has been modified many times in the 20+ years that LC played it as his main amp. Since the early days, that amp would sing like there's no tomorrow -- the "Last Nite" live album being an early example of it. By the time Brandon serviced it, even though the amp had been turned into a Ripper, Brandon said the the thing would feedback like crazy on the clean channel, with no boost required, like no other amp he'd ever played. Seems to me like that amp was special since day one.talbany wrote: ↑Thu Jun 21, 2018 8:47 pm Erwin
wire in FBC amp was cloth covered solid core wire from mojotone given to me from VVT Amps because they did not like it for some reason.
I probably would have phrased it slightly differently, but yep, that' the one.
Gil
The dilemma I had with that amp was,I had 2 choices
1. Dissect the amp which would have involved removing some parts for testing and quite possibly disturbing whatever was causing the amp to do what it was doing?
2.Leave the amp alone and preserve the anomaly!
I choose #2. I scoped the thing then had others scope the thing and theories mounted but the only way to confirm the theory's we suspected was to take the amp apart and even then no guarantees we would find it so I could not bring myself to putting an iron to it..Someone finally offered an insane amount of money so I took it and ran![]()
Anyway thanks to all your great advice over the years I think I can do it again.![]()
Tony
Yep I remember hearing stories of the LC amp having the mojo. If the thing fedback like crazy as a LP Classic?. Going to a Ripper would IMO only intensify itayan wrote: ↑Thu Jun 21, 2018 9:11 pmI hear you. It's hard to say why things are the way they are, when it comes to amps that is. I remember that of the amps I built, some just sounded more to my liking than others no matter what I did. I could make changes to all of them, and maybe for the better. But the better ones always ended up being the better ones, no matter what. I'm sure the same happens with Dumbles. LC's Dumble's has been modified many times in the 20+ years that LC played it as his main amp. Since the early days, that amp would sing like there's no tomorrow -- the "Last Nite" live album being an early example of it. By the time Brandon serviced it, even though the amp had been turned into a Ripper, Brandon said the the thing would feedback like crazy on the clean channel, with no boost required, like no other amp he'd ever played. Seems to me like that amp was special since day one.talbany wrote: ↑Thu Jun 21, 2018 8:47 pm Erwin
wire in FBC amp was cloth covered solid core wire from mojotone given to me from VVT Amps because they did not like it for some reason.
I probably would have phrased it slightly differently, but yep, that' the one.
Gil
The dilemma I had with that amp was,I had 2 choices
1. Dissect the amp which would have involved removing some parts for testing and quite possibly disturbing whatever was causing the amp to do what it was doing?
2.Leave the amp alone and preserve the anomaly!
I choose #2. I scoped the thing then had others scope the thing and theories mounted but the only way to confirm the theory's we suspected was to take the amp apart and even then no guarantees we would find it so I could not bring myself to putting an iron to it..Someone finally offered an insane amount of money so I took it and ran![]()
Anyway thanks to all your great advice over the years I think I can do it again.![]()
Tony
Goo luck in the next build!
G.
Shyte, if you get the new amp to do "it," I'll probably want to keep it.talbany wrote: ↑Thu Jun 21, 2018 10:39 pm Yep I remember hearing stories of the LC amp having the mojo. If the thing fedback like crazy as a LP Classic?. Going to a Ripper would IMO only intensify it.. Last night and the Jing Chi are my 2 iconic D-tones
![]()
It always seems like we are chasing the same thing!
That last 5%.
BTW..If I can get this next amp to do it..I am shipping it out to you.If you can't find it nobody can!!. You have my permission to take it apart![]()
Tony
Here I am reading some thread randomly and I stumble on to a continuation of tag's greatest mystery.ayan wrote: ↑Tue Jun 19, 2018 8:22 pmHey Tony, in the end, what happened to "Feedback City"?talbany wrote: ↑Wed Jun 13, 2018 8:32 am Dumble has been known to influence positive feedback into a circuit through the routing of certain wires in close proximity to one another...Like Gil mentions these practices have the tendency to make the amp unstable. The trick is knowing which ones you can play with and which ones you can't
BTW.Don't ask which ones go where..I have no idea.![]()
Tony
G.
How does an amp feedback on clean?Since the early days, that amp would sing like there's no tomorrow -- the "Last Nite" live album being an early example of it. By the time Brandon serviced it, even though the amp had been turned into a Ripper, Brandon said the the thing would feedback like crazy on the clean channel, with no boost required, like no other amp he'd ever played. Seems to me like that amp was special since day one.
I'm sure the volume would need to be fairly high for that to happen, but I never played that amp so I wouldn't know for sure. I think the nice thing about getting the positive feedback to happen is that the louder you are, the less gain you will need (or be able to control, as you hint at) to get good sustain. Still, I never good the clean channel on my amps to do that. With the PAB and lots of volume, maybe.Mark wrote: ↑Thu Oct 11, 2018 9:31 pm How does an amp feedback on clean?
I'd imagine the amp would have to be very loud to establish a feedback path from the speaker to guitar and through the amp.
The other thing with positive feedback how do you stop it becoming an annoying oscillation within an amp?
The last thing you want to do is play a note and have a bite to eat and find the amp is still singing when you return.![]()
In the video between 3.16-3.22 you can spot the Dumble and.... is that a Boogie rack below?Charlie Wilson wrote: ↑Tue Oct 16, 2018 4:54 am Hmmm, is Larry Carlton using a Dumble or a Mesa Boogie with a lot of delay?
CW
You know that's the first thing I though when I listened to this clip, man Larry sure sounds a bit like B.B. King here