kylendm":2l0ck1hc said:
Also so I have a boggy 4x12. It fucking sick, tons of low end and the highs are super smooth. I find that paired with by Baron K88 it kinda gets buried in the mix. My other guitarist uses an Axefx with the 5150 model, his 333xl head (for power) and bugera cab and he cuts through like a knife. I love the K88 but maybe If I paired it up with a Mesa I might cut through more?
Thoughts? I've used Mesas before and always liked them but I haven't been able to A/B it with the Bogner.
While the cabinet makes the [biggest] difference out of any part of the equipment chain, user error is probably part of the equation. Given you are playing with another person using a tube amp, you can get any [amp with a tube power section] to cut through a live mix, given you are setting the control knobs appropriately, and that the amp is electrically capable of producing enough wattage. I have run some insane settings live on a few of my amps, even when they were mic'd up at shows, and have had no issues being heard personally, or by the audience. I have used a plethora of cabinets from ones with no branding or markings to Mesa Standard 412s. Get those mids up there and the treble down a bit. Once it sounds great on stage, you should be in business.
I prefer the Mesa cabinets to Bogner cabinets any day.
Brandon Ellis from the band Arsis has been using my old Baron K2 live for his entire career. It does the trick live:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C-IgaVIxfpI
Check out the rig on the right
stratotone":2l0ck1hc said:
Batting inside a cab doesn't affect the highs - it does change the calculated internal volume by up to 20%. In other words, it makes the cab sound bigger. Any high end loss on a bogner cab is that grillcloth, the old Marshall cloth was the same way. It was like a high end roll off.
I would say it definitely affects the high end. Changing the calculated volume alone will alter the high end due to the Fletcher-Munson curve and how our ears perceive the spectrum at different volume levels. High frequency waves bouncing through the cabinet that have enough energy are eventually going to be re-directed at the speaker cones and will be either absorbed, amplified, or diffused depending on the physical factors. The batting will absorb higher to lower-mid band frequencies depending on the noise reduction coefficient of the material.