S
stevieb
Just another guy, really.
I wonder if so-called "Tube Overdrives" or "Tube Screamers" are really all that different from other distortion pedals.
As I own several tube amps (Silverface Fender Deluxe Reverb, Silverface Fender Pro Reverb '78, Monkey-Wards Model 6000), I would want a distortion pedal named "Tube Something" to drive the tubes into that warm, "brown" distortion we all love so much, when the amp is less than cranked. But comparing a Boss DS-1, a Ibenez TS-9, and a Digitech MetalMaster, I think they all do pretty much the same thing- which I suspect is simply to dirty up the signal BEFORE it gets to the amp. Sure, they sound different, but not all THAT different, after you either aurally/mentally listen thru the noise, or tweek the knobs so they all make closer to the same sound. Oh, before I forget- the Monkey-Wards does NOT need any help distorting- how I wish it did, that cheap but interesting thing distorts when it's volume is half-way up. Everyone should own one of those near-POS amps- occasionally they come in handy.
Thing is, I don't REALLY know what they do- and I don't know that on many different levels:
First and last, how anything SOUNDS is most important, so I don't want to get only lengthly, technical expositions filled with buzz-speak and weazel words- first, I'd like to know what the END RESULTS of each of those pedals is.
Second, I'd like to know if any of them, or other reasonably-priced pedals (I am not going to pay $100 for a pedal, EVER, unless it offers me a cigarette after we have had our fun...) actually DO overdrive the tubes in such a way as to give me that warm/brown sound at less than cranked levels.
Third, sure- give me the long technical explanation, if for no other reason than to show all the rest of us how smart you are. While you pretend to be oh-so-much-smarter than the rest of us, we will pretend to listen.
And finally, perhaps I am asking the wrong things of a distortion pedal? I know an attenuator will make the amp "think" it is playing loud, when in fact most of that energy is being absorbed by the attenuator while the speaker is producing SPL's that our ears can live with. So, is an attenuator what I REALLY need, or can a budget-priced distortion pedal help me? (Oh, and keep all the "you gotta spend the big bux like I did/on the gold-plated pedals I build" post. Seen 'em- YOU guys are no help whatsoever.) I know the difference between a true attenuator and those silly volume controls that sell for $10 on ebay, too- although if one of the SVC's really DOES work, by all means, do tell me about it.
Or do I need to buy a Princeton or Champ?
As I own several tube amps (Silverface Fender Deluxe Reverb, Silverface Fender Pro Reverb '78, Monkey-Wards Model 6000), I would want a distortion pedal named "Tube Something" to drive the tubes into that warm, "brown" distortion we all love so much, when the amp is less than cranked. But comparing a Boss DS-1, a Ibenez TS-9, and a Digitech MetalMaster, I think they all do pretty much the same thing- which I suspect is simply to dirty up the signal BEFORE it gets to the amp. Sure, they sound different, but not all THAT different, after you either aurally/mentally listen thru the noise, or tweek the knobs so they all make closer to the same sound. Oh, before I forget- the Monkey-Wards does NOT need any help distorting- how I wish it did, that cheap but interesting thing distorts when it's volume is half-way up. Everyone should own one of those near-POS amps- occasionally they come in handy.
Thing is, I don't REALLY know what they do- and I don't know that on many different levels:
First and last, how anything SOUNDS is most important, so I don't want to get only lengthly, technical expositions filled with buzz-speak and weazel words- first, I'd like to know what the END RESULTS of each of those pedals is.
Second, I'd like to know if any of them, or other reasonably-priced pedals (I am not going to pay $100 for a pedal, EVER, unless it offers me a cigarette after we have had our fun...) actually DO overdrive the tubes in such a way as to give me that warm/brown sound at less than cranked levels.
Third, sure- give me the long technical explanation, if for no other reason than to show all the rest of us how smart you are. While you pretend to be oh-so-much-smarter than the rest of us, we will pretend to listen.
And finally, perhaps I am asking the wrong things of a distortion pedal? I know an attenuator will make the amp "think" it is playing loud, when in fact most of that energy is being absorbed by the attenuator while the speaker is producing SPL's that our ears can live with. So, is an attenuator what I REALLY need, or can a budget-priced distortion pedal help me? (Oh, and keep all the "you gotta spend the big bux like I did/on the gold-plated pedals I build" post. Seen 'em- YOU guys are no help whatsoever.) I know the difference between a true attenuator and those silly volume controls that sell for $10 on ebay, too- although if one of the SVC's really DOES work, by all means, do tell me about it.
Or do I need to buy a Princeton or Champ?
