
steve_k
New member
Anybody give much thought to grill cloth and sound projection? Now, I am not anal enough to chase down tone in a grill cloth. But, yesterday, I was dicking around in the cave, matching some head/cabs/speakers up and was sort of surprised (well, really surprised) at the difference in the tone/projection of the cabs, using the same head. If you consider the 70's Marshall, the Marshall Handwired, the Bogner and Wizard cabs to essentially be of the same design (and they are), with essentially the same family of speakers (they are all GB's or Scum equivalents with the same wattage), you would be amazed at the difference in projection and tone. It is a hell of a lot more audible than I would have thought. The Wizard and Bogner have a fairly loose black basket weave cloth and are pretty much identical. The 70's Marshall has that old Salt n Pepper loose weave. The Handwired has the tight S&P basket weave. There's also the Mesa, which is the odd cab of the lot, being oversized and loaded with Celestion 65's and should be a little louder. It has a very different grill covering than the rest (not sure what they call it).
The iPhone clips weren't really that clear and I didn't fool with uploading them, but standing in the room, it was very clear. If was really a swell guy, I would mic these up and make some proper clips to show the difference.
However, hands down, the Marshall Handwired with the Celestion Heritage 30's was the most pleasing to me. That tight grill cloth helps to keep the audio projection somewhat controlled or choked back and not dispersed into infinity like the rest of them. It develops a lot of thump and bottom and leaves the top end smooth, not too harsh. That's just my opinion though and what I am after - and not really the point of the discussion. Maybe though, for the similar cab designs (based on the Marshall 68/69 cabs), with the same general family of speakers/output, tonal satisfaction has more to do with grill covering than one would think, rather than the actual speaker or cab.
I don't know fuck all though. Food for thought....go eat.
The iPhone clips weren't really that clear and I didn't fool with uploading them, but standing in the room, it was very clear. If was really a swell guy, I would mic these up and make some proper clips to show the difference.
However, hands down, the Marshall Handwired with the Celestion Heritage 30's was the most pleasing to me. That tight grill cloth helps to keep the audio projection somewhat controlled or choked back and not dispersed into infinity like the rest of them. It develops a lot of thump and bottom and leaves the top end smooth, not too harsh. That's just my opinion though and what I am after - and not really the point of the discussion. Maybe though, for the similar cab designs (based on the Marshall 68/69 cabs), with the same general family of speakers/output, tonal satisfaction has more to do with grill covering than one would think, rather than the actual speaker or cab.
I don't know fuck all though. Food for thought....go eat.
