Aristocat":2un4obpq said:
TrueTone500":2un4obpq said:
I use one with both my Cornford and VOX AC30. Both the VOX and Cornford amps are designed to handle a maximum voltage of 115/230VAC, not 120/240VAC. The voltage in my area can get as high as 128VAC! If you're going to run your amp at 90VAC, you should consider having it mod'd with a dedicated transformer to supply the heaters. When you drop the voltage, current increases proportionate to demand... This of-course results in increased heat. I would personally not run one with a PCB built amplifier. Some of the Bogner 100B amps were experiencing burned power connections when ran too hard in 'variac' mode. The connectors were blamed, but the real issue was the increased current = increased heat. The fix for this was to solder the wires directly to the terminals. I run my amps at 110 to 115, but no higher. Sounds best around 113VAC.
Thanks for the thought out response!
I say 90 as EVH is the only guy that I can think of that used a variac. I just want to experimental tone wise.
I like doing little things such as strings/tubes etc for different tones.
Could I just drop it ten volts and be safe? What do you use for a variac?
Is there any real benefit aside from 'feel' or is this just snake oil?
It's not 'snake-oil'. Varied voltage is one of the most effective means of changing how your amp reacts. The lower the voltage, the more 'gated' your attack becomes. It does not change the tone per se... It effects the way in which your amp responds to picking and the way in which the notes sustain. Sort-of induces a more 'vintage' feel. Bias contributes also. You can actuate the bias via an external modification if you want to go all-out. I owned a Mojave 'Dirty Boy' for a short while, so I was able to get good feel for variac w/varied bias. The DB uses Fender topology, so I would have had to make major changes to get a "Marshall" thing happening.
A 10 volt drop is fine. You can run as low as 110VAC without stripping the tubes, but no lower. I use a Tenma 10A/130VAC variac. I would look for a rebuilt Staco 3PN1010 if you don't mind spending $200.00 to $300.00 USD. The Staco's use % on the dial, so make sure you don't mistake the 100% mark as 100VAC. Always take a reading with a volt meter, set it where you want it, then remove the dial on the top so it does not get moved by accident.