Sixtonoize":s7rm9acz said:
glpg80":s7rm9acz said:
you dont understand, however, that Mike Soldano invented the SLO design first - a one off that no one else had done. not marshall, fender, or anyone.
a SLO does not resemble a marshall and i do not care what you say, there is nothing identical in design at all. not even the same tube stages and output tube design.
Touchy, are we?
I'm not saying that the SLO wasn't a revolutionary design that defined what a "modern" amp was - my point was that every amp design that exists builds on the groundwork of the designs that came before it. And it's not like the SLO is exactly 100% original - the power section looks
suspiciously like the back end of the Mesa Mark I, which came along some 20-ish years prior...and wasn't exactly an original design then, either.
The revolutionary thing about the SLO is the cold clipping stage, which, as far as I know, no other amp builder had used before, and few modern amps omit. That's totally unique. However, the rest of the schematic is old tech - cascaded gain stages, a buffered FX loop, and a very familiar power section. Sure, Mike Soldano managed to combine the old ideas in a new and unique way, but that doesn't mean that he created an entirely new design from scratch...he took ideas that worked and modified them into something unique.
A: i know more about the design of the SLO than most people would know.
B: there is no tube dedicated to buffering an effects loop in a standard SLO. just a grid break and careful cathode bias resistor that follows it for dB drop consideration.
C: The power section was not identical to any other manufacturer at the time of its invention. i know people who build SLO clone's just for the amplifiers power section of immense headroom and huge volume capabilities.
D: Mike got lucky with the 39k. thats all im saying. the same is true with krank's model revolution. there is a design flaw trying to apply a bias method and they goofed by accident. the accident actually worked in their favor, the rest is history.
E: when you design something as an engineer you design from ideas not patent copies. one is called innovation the other is called evolution. get a dictionary.
and i do take offense dude. especially when i am designing an amplifier to be released from the ground up - no jose mods, no hairy mods, no SLO copies, nothing. and its a slap in the face to call my work a copy of someone else's design. the mathmatics and application of an amplifier might be the same, but that is as far as the similarities go.