Is this guy crazy?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Gino
  • Start date Start date
When I was getting fed up with the popping and delays, Mike Fortin offered to help me out with a mod that can get rid of it. I didn't take him up on it because the amp was out the door a few days later due to my anger with it, but for anyone interested it might be worth a shot.
 
FortinAmps":5v2e8zx8 said:
Gino":5v2e8zx8 said:
Alright, so I think my friend/coworker is a little obsessed but I'd like to know what you guys think and what your experience is with these amps... He had a TSL and, while he liked the tone, he couldn't stand how it switched channels. When he'd hit the switch, there would be a volume swell and it drove him nuts. So now he's selling the amp. He's a big fan of the Rectifier and has had his heart set on a Dual Rec for quite a while. When he checked one out at GC, he gave up his hopes of owning one because when he hit the footswitch to change channels there was an audible "pop" that came through the amp. He said was even louder than the guitar signal coming through at the same time. So now his criteria for buying an amp, in order of importance, is: 1) How it switches. 2) How it sounds. He's now looking into a Peavey JSX because his other guitar player has one and it doesn't make any noise when it switches. His other option is the Egnater Renegade, which I recommended, but he hasn't tried it yet and if it pops when switching he won't even consider it.

So what gives? Are all these switching issues really that prevalent? I find it hard to believe that after all these years this is the first I've heard of a Dual Rec loudly popping when switching between channels. Is this something he should just get over? I told him that his priorities are a little off but he's obsessed now and if he doesn't like how it switches, he doesn't care how it sounds after that.

:scared:

If your buddy has his heart set on a Dual Recto, go for the older ones. They didn't use relays, they used LDRs, no popping ;)
Hey, Mike, any specific years to look for?... Also, any input on what the poster above said?
 
liamlw":3lwupe58 said:
to be honest when I used the DR at actual decent volumes I didn't hear any pops.

At band volumes it was a non-issue, at least for me when I had one. Only the bedroom. :lol: :LOL:

Rectifiers as bedroom amps a good choice does not make.
 
Shiny_Surface":1r0l6ag1 said:
liamlw":1r0l6ag1 said:
to be honest when I used the DR at actual decent volumes I didn't hear any pops.

At band volumes it was a non-issue, at least for me when I had one. Only the bedroom. :lol: :LOL:

Rectifiers as bedroom amps a good choice does not make.

the force we are strong with are we :D

there are alot of amplifiers here on the forum that are terrible choices to bedroom amplifiers. but to be honest i use the gear i purchase for everything and then some. its an investment. some of the best tones i pulled out of my rigs were when i took it home from band practice buildings and sat down with it to dial it in.
 
glpg80":33cx1zfm said:
the force we are strong with are we :D

there are alot of amplifiers here on the forum that are terrible choices to bedroom amplifiers. but to be honest i use the gear i purchase for everything and then some. its an investment. some of the best tones i pulled out of my rigs were when i took it home from band practice buildings and sat down with it to dial it in.

For sure, I've gotten some great Recto tones at home but the best tones (for me) were up loud in a band mix for sure. This particular problem is well documented on the Boogie Board and it can be reduced greatly by a simple routine when first powering up the amp.

Every amp I've ever owned even the higher end ones had some sort of quirk about them I didn't like or annoyed me in some way. An individual has to do their own personal "cost/benefit" analysis when they try out an amp and decide if the positives outweigh the negatives for their specific needs and tolerances.
 
If I had to play any softer than I do I would not even bother turning on one of the tube amps to be honest, they just sound better gunned. My JVM and Fortin do have great MVs but I can play at louder than tv levels due to the wife sleeping like a bear :lol: :LOL:
 
Gino":293xu7c6 said:
FortinAmps":293xu7c6 said:
Gino":293xu7c6 said:
Alright, so I think my friend/coworker is a little obsessed but I'd like to know what you guys think and what your experience is with these amps... He had a TSL and, while he liked the tone, he couldn't stand how it switched channels. When he'd hit the switch, there would be a volume swell and it drove him nuts. So now he's selling the amp. He's a big fan of the Rectifier and has had his heart set on a Dual Rec for quite a while. When he checked one out at GC, he gave up his hopes of owning one because when he hit the footswitch to change channels there was an audible "pop" that came through the amp. He said was even louder than the guitar signal coming through at the same time. So now his criteria for buying an amp, in order of importance, is: 1) How it switches. 2) How it sounds. He's now looking into a Peavey JSX because his other guitar player has one and it doesn't make any noise when it switches. His other option is the Egnater Renegade, which I recommended, but he hasn't tried it yet and if it pops when switching he won't even consider it.

So what gives? Are all these switching issues really that prevalent? I find it hard to believe that after all these years this is the first I've heard of a Dual Rec loudly popping when switching between channels. Is this something he should just get over? I told him that his priorities are a little off but he's obsessed now and if he doesn't like how it switches, he doesn't care how it sounds after that.

:scared:

If your buddy has his heart set on a Dual Recto, go for the older ones. They didn't use relays, they used LDRs, no popping ;)
Hey, Mike, any specific years to look for?... Also, any input on what the poster above said?

I don't know for sure when Boogie changed to the relay format with the Dual Rectifier series. Maybe someone else can chime in or I'd give Boogie a call directly and ask one of the tech there.
Cheers,
Mike
 
FortinAmps":24ge4jwr said:
Gino":24ge4jwr said:
FortinAmps":24ge4jwr said:
Gino":24ge4jwr said:
Alright, so I think my friend/coworker is a little obsessed but I'd like to know what you guys think and what your experience is with these amps... He had a TSL and, while he liked the tone, he couldn't stand how it switched channels. When he'd hit the switch, there would be a volume swell and it drove him nuts. So now he's selling the amp. He's a big fan of the Rectifier and has had his heart set on a Dual Rec for quite a while. When he checked one out at GC, he gave up his hopes of owning one because when he hit the footswitch to change channels there was an audible "pop" that came through the amp. He said was even louder than the guitar signal coming through at the same time. So now his criteria for buying an amp, in order of importance, is: 1) How it switches. 2) How it sounds. He's now looking into a Peavey JSX because his other guitar player has one and it doesn't make any noise when it switches. His other option is the Egnater Renegade, which I recommended, but he hasn't tried it yet and if it pops when switching he won't even consider it.

So what gives? Are all these switching issues really that prevalent? I find it hard to believe that after all these years this is the first I've heard of a Dual Rec loudly popping when switching between channels. Is this something he should just get over? I told him that his priorities are a little off but he's obsessed now and if he doesn't like how it switches, he doesn't care how it sounds after that.

:scared:

If your buddy has his heart set on a Dual Recto, go for the older ones. They didn't use relays, they used LDRs, no popping ;)
Hey, Mike, any specific years to look for?... Also, any input on what the poster above said?

I don't know for sure when Boogie changed to the relay format with the Dual Rectifier series. Maybe someone else can chime in or I'd give Boogie a call directly and ask one of the tech there.
Cheers,
Mike

Safest bet is to buy a rackmount dual rect, As hey discountnued them before they changed the format on the rectos.
 
I think everything has to do with being happy with the amp. If one small thing 'bothers' me.....
It only festers until I get rid of the amp. I know that there isnt a PERFECT amp out there that does it all and no issues(Well I have never come across one) but I believe that you need to be totally happy and not settle.
Now if he only disliked the way it LOOKED then I would tell him to keep it. Anything other than that.......weed it out until you find that amp that your SATISFIED with.
Lord knows I went down a LONG WINDING path of amps to find that 'ONE' :yes:
 
Well since I been leaning alot towards metal these days.....that Fireball 100.
Sounds great in my setup.
PERFECT for what we play and thats all that really matters.
Like I wrote so many times.....what is god tone to me....may sound like shit to someone else! ;)
I love the New Engl while others probably HATE it! :lol: :LOL:

Danno
 

Similar threads

Back
Top