feraledge":2pc9my09 said:
I've got an EVH 5153 and two infants on the way. My volume limits at home are about to drop down drastically. I'm looking for thoughts on attenuators, namely Rivera, THD, and Weber. I'm not looking to crank the amp ridiculously, I just want the low volume to sound more like the low-mid volume.
Thoughts? Experiences?
Thanks!
Having young children, I've found attenuators to be a blessing. I've been through a few of them so hopefully this helps.
Of your list, I would go for the Rivera. I haven't tried it, but its features look right. For the THD, I had read negative comments on its ability to model a real speaker's impedance. For the Weber, I had one but sold it because measurements of its impedance looked strange. And I was a bit put off by their claim that it works with any amplifier impedance setting, even though the attenuator itself has no switch to adjust what impedance it expects to see. Every other attenuator in the world has a switch to select the impedance. And I checked by connecting the Weber to different output jacks (4/8/16) on my amp and found they all sounded different. I don't buy their claim and sold it.
I use an Aracom attenuator and love it. I'm recommending the Rivera from your list, because for one reason it looks similar to the Aracom in terms of features. One nice feature is that it can be used as a load box with an unfiltered line out. This is my favorite use of the attenuator now. Disconnect your speaker cabinet entirely. Connect the attenuator to the amp in load mode. Then run the line-out to your PC. In your PC DAW run that signal into an impulse response VST and use any of the great speaker cabinet impulse responses out there, such as the ones by Redwire. Great tones through your desktop speakers!
This for me is the ultimate situation because I'm getting the amp tone at extremely low volume levels, and also can use any number of virtual speaker cabinets and microphones to play it through. The resulting tones are great and the volume level can be whisper quiet. So not only does it reduce the level dramatically, but it opens up a world of new tones. And look into tone matching using Ozone for ways of using your amp to cop existing recorded album guitar tones!
The Aracom is great, but to get an unfiltered line out you need the PRX150-DAG which is almost double the price of the others you are looking at. So without having heard it, I'd go for the Rivera based on its claims of impedance matching and the unfiltered line out. Otherwise look at the Aracom for something that certainly works well for both attenuation and direct recording.
Happy fathering!