
jimistheman
Active member
This is music to my ears and EXACTLY what I was looking for in the SE. Big fan of your guitars and amps, John!!!!
Jim
Jim
Suhr":fy7okmps said:I've always looked at the SE as a tone that someone with good pick control can tweak just by the way he plays.
The SE was me chasing some of my old heroes like Billy Gibbons, Old Neal Schon, Leslie West, Brian May.
I like things over the top and that gives me the ability to squeeze the tones out just by the way I play, play with a lighter touch and turn the amp up, work the volume control and explore the tones the pick can give you. There are a few schools of thought on bass.
1) Take most the bass out of the preamp and but it back in the power section.
Advantages to this is the amp is tighter, you still have bass and it is easy to play with chords and chunk rhythm, it is very forgiving on cord work with high gain.
Disadvantage, the bass isn't real, it doesn't push past the cabinet in a live situation and sometimes the tone sounds "produced" or stuck in the cabinet.
Power section is dirtier and has more harmonic distortion.
Single note solo lines are thinner sounding not as fat and 3D as alternatives.
2) Put bass in the preamp and have the power section be relatively flat (not boosting bass)
Advantages to this are the single note soloing are fat and 3D. Sweet solo tones that cut through. Friendlier with single coils.
Preamp send (effects loop) is what you get and the power section is easier used as a true power amp with effects.
In the SE the gain is substantial and the gain pot is another tone essentially, For instance, you will get a shreddy tight tone with the gain on 5 or 6 but push it up around 7 or 8 and you better have excellent pick control to deal with that fat overdrive. For the record this is basically the same circuit as Doug Aldrich's main amp he has used for Dio (live record), Whitesnake and most of his live gigs. Doug does not push the gain past 5 or 6 and prefers to boost in front for solos. Reb Beach also used this circuit for many years up until 2 years ago when he switched to PT100s. You can also hear this clearly on the Rhythm tracks of F.U.C.K on The Dream is over, those Rhythm tracks are the 3+ channel 3 before the SE (which I could put in an SE)
Disadvantage... When playing high gain settings it can get muddy if you don't control the bass but IMO the rewards come back to you 10 fold when you get a handle on the beast.
For the record the PT100 sits someplace in the middle and is a blend of those two schools of thought.