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AMPLIFIER INTRO
by GM
Arts
Electric guitarists can be fairly criticised
for their reluctance to change to new ideas
and technologies, however, there is no doubt
that a classic 1950s guitar and valve
amplifier in good condition still sounds
great in modern recordings. This is a testament
to good design from the start. What has
improved today is consistency, and the cost
benefits of production line manufacture.
This is offset by the rarity of good guitar
wood (it makes a huge difference, even on
an electric guitar), increased labour costs
for both guitars and amplification equipment,
and the availability of good and consistent
quality valves.
There is also an element of nostalgia,
with memories of many of the great players
of years gone by, and the desire to use
the same types of instruments and equipment
to recapture the magic. Vintage instruments
and equipment have become valuable collectors
items also (some with very inflated prices)
which adds further to the desirability of
older tools of the trade. There has been
a recent trend by many companies to re-market
their original instruments and equipment;
new guitars can even be bought now "pre-aged"!
This desire for vintage equipment is also
related to guitarists reluctance to
part with valve amplification, and there
are many reasons (discussed later) why valve
and solid state amplifiers behave differently.
Quite simply, if players prefer the sound
of valves, they will continue to buy and
use them.
Design Basics
There are still several solid-state designs
today with fundamental design flaws. This
is most likely a result of not understanding
typical electric guitar specifications,
and in assuming that the purpose of the
amplifier is to accurately reproduce the
signal without distortion. To be fair, this
type of design suits some "clean"
guitar styles such as electric jazz, acoustic
guitar, and traditional country styles.
Here are some fundamentals:
Input Impedance: Typically 1M, 500K
minimum (humbucking pickup guitars have
volume pots up to 500K, single coil pickup
guitars typically of 250K)
Tone Controls: Magnetic guitar pickups
are inductive, and require compensation,
although this opportunity is also used for
tone enhancement, not just correction. Without
compensation, they have a strong low middle
emphasis and little high frequency response
- overall a very muddy and muffled sound.
This is why typical hi-fi Baxandall treble
& bass controls are unsuitable.
To hear the natural sound of a pickup,
use a typical guitar amp with the middle
set to full, and bass and treble on 0. This
is actually sets a flat response in the
amp (see below), and I expect you will hear
a muffled and muddy sound. And that's the
whole point of these tone controls providing
compensation for the natural sound of a
pickup - the middle control simply boosts
the pickup's normal middley sound. The treble
and bass controls do the opposite - they
boost higher and lower frequency levels,
leaving a notch in-between for middle cut
(see the Fender/Marshall comparison below).
So with typical settings of a bit of bass,
middle and treble, the overall tone equalisation
complements the natural pickup sound for
a balanced response of lows, mids and highs.

Full middle boost with no bass or treble
actually gives a near-flat frequency response,
allowing you to hear the natural sound of
your pickups.
Here are circuit diagrams of typical Fender
and Marshall tone controls. They both meet
the criteria of compensating for pickups'
low-middle emphasis, as well as providing
a useful range of tone adjustment.
The Fender and Marshall circuits are each
tailored to suit their own styles, which
are quite different. Although a generalisation,
Fender's market and power output stage are
geared towards provided clean and chunky
tones at clean and early-overdrive levels.
Marshall amps are best at low-middly and
crunchy rock tones, played at medium to
high overdrive levels.
Here are some frequency response plots
showing the range and effect of Fender and
Marshall tone controls. These are screen
captures from the excellent Tone Stack Windows
program developed by Duncan Munro. If you're
interested in this sort of thing, you can
download
the program from Duncan's website.
Here
is a simple comparison of Marshall and Fender
response with what might loosely be called
'typical settings' of Bass on 3, Middle
on 4, and Treble on 6. The most obvious
difference is that the Marshall lets more
level through, and their tone controls have
less range of adjustment. The higher level
means that by using the same number of preamp
valve stages, a Marshall can overdrive the
output stage more.
Bearing in mind that 6-string guitar notes
don't go below 80Hz, and typical guitar
speakers cut above about 5KHz, these responses
are similar. Both have a middle dip that
is primarily compensation for typical pickups'
middle emphasis, rather than an obvious
dip in middle response. The Marshall circuit
has this cut about an octave higher than
the Fender, leaving the low mids and bass
intact for that full Marshall sound. On
the other hand, Fender's tone controls allow
high-mids to pass with the treble response,
and add little bass boost for the sparkling
and tight sounds they're famous for.
Here are charts each of the Fender controls.
In all cases, the other two controls are
left at 5. For example, the treble chart
shows he effect of varying Treble from 0
to 10, with Bass and Middle both at 5. Notice
that all controls have a wide range of adjustment,
and that the bass control has most effect
from 0 to about 3. Anyone's who has used
a Fender will know this, and this control
could easily be replaced by a control with
a stronger logarithmic taper to smooth this
out without changing the range of available
tones. The Fender circuit also has the unusual
side effact that if all controls are set
to 0, then no sound is produced at all.
The Marshall design avoids this, but the
tone with all controls set to 0 is not something
you'd be likely to use anyway.
[Below] are the same charts for Marshall
tone controls. As mentioned already, the
main points to note are the smaller range
of adjustment, the higher frequency for
the middle cut control, and the higher overall
signal level. The smaller adjustment range
and higher level are both caused by the
use of the 33K resistor in place of Fender's
100K. The also gives the tone stack a lower
input impedance, requiring it to be fed
from a lower output impedance (cathode follower)
preamp valve stage.
Valve power amplifiers often provide an
additional presence control (which reduces
negative feedback in the power amplifier
section) to provide a small amount of boost
at frequencies above the treble control.
Wide Dynamic Range: A plucked guitar string
requires a wide dynamic range to handle
the initial peak, then cleanly amplify the
decaying string vibrations. Some poor designs
do not have this capability in their preamp
stages, let alone the power amp to handle
this. Pre-amplifier stages need generous
power rails, and should not have gain stages
which cause the initial plucked part of
the string sustain envelope to be clipped.
Use Instrument Speakers. Unlike
hi-fi speakers, which are designed to keep
the coil entirely within the magnetic field
to maximise linearity, instrument speakers
are designed to have the coil partially
leave the magnetic field at the extremes
of cone travel. This is partly to protect
the speaker, but also produces a "soft-clipping"
effect which is desirable with guitar amplifiers.
It is also therefore important to match
speaker power ratings reasonably closely
with the power of the amplifier. Popular
instrument speakers are available from Electro
Voice (EV), Celestion and J B Lansing (JBL).
Durability. Most musical styles
will require the amplifier to be overdriven
for extended periods of time, and the amplifier
must be designed to provide this without
duress on any components. Common non-guitar
design principles assume that circuitry
will be designed to avoid overdrive, and
technicians working in this field have to
"un-learn" many basic assumptions.
Popular circuits have evolved through trial
and error, due to a general lack of documented
knowledge in the field of non-linear amplification.
Road Worthiness. Musical equipment
of this type needs both physical and electrical
protection. A band often has its equipment
transported and set up by a road crew with
little guarantee of physical care. Likewise,
an assumption should be made that the output
stage will at times be inadvertently shorted,
so most professional equipment is designed
to handle this contingency, preferably electronically,
and at the very least without internal fuses.
Do It Yourself?
As technology develops, I'm less convinced
that it is practical for do-it-yourselfers
to build their own guitar amplifiers and
preamplifiers.
Certainly, valve amplifier components (particularly
output transformers) are becoming less common
as separately available items. While the
cost of professional valve amplifiers are
much higher than the equivalent solid state
designs, they are fair and competitive.
In addition, you get a well designed unit
with good reliability and a guarantee.
Likewise, recent solid state designs minimise
the undesirable features of this technology,
and are also available at a fair price.
There is still scope to build overdrive
circuits such as the one shown on my Overdrive
& Distortion page, either as a stand-alone
device mounted in a foot pedal, or built
into a preamplifier. There has been little
development of this technology over the
last 10 years; most recent modifications
have provided additional flexibility, and
several original classics have been repackaged.
Recent digital overdrive designs are showing
considerable potential by software emulation
of valve amplifier overdrive and dynamic
response characteristics, in conjunction
with speaker box simulations. These are
more flexible and controllable than analog
designs, and AD/DA converters have also
improved dramatically since some early efforts.
I expect that these will further improve
and become cheaper in the future.
While components and technology for digital
processing are readily available, there
is an enormous research effort required,
and it is not in the interests of companies
who have made this effort to share their
knowledge. For this reason, I don't believe
these devices are a viable home construction
proposition, however, it's always fun to
learn and experiment!
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