H
halebox
Active member
I see it on Camerons, EVH 5150, Barons. Who started it? Its a cool feature
That's what I was thinking too. Must be the guy who developed the 5150 with EVH. I forget his name. He also designed the XXX.DAMIAN The MAN":3522fbmq said:I don't remember heard about it until the PV 5150 came out in 1991, but my memory is way too selective.
chunktone":n3xxkln0 said:That's what I was thinking too. Must be the guy who developed the 5150 with EVH. I forget his name. He also designed the XXX.DAMIAN The MAN":n3xxkln0 said:I don't remember heard about it until the PV 5150 came out in 1991, but my memory is way too selective.
I believe Steve is the one.Kelly":u2oj7ju5 said:Steve Fryette.
tech21man":mk0pvxy3 said:Well if you think that it is exactly the "same" principal with the pressence circuit you can't actually give credit to an amp designer for an invention. I first noticed it in peavey. You could play with caps all day and also have mid-yada something ance if you want etc in the power amp, which it all breaks down when you overdrive and are left without useable gain (the ...it doesn't do anything after a point thing).
Fryette is awesome though (and a genious of sort) the way he handles negative feedback and the phase shifts that it causes all the way back he is feeding it into the preamp. Usually it ends up in the phase inverter calculating three major phase shifts "poles" (transformer, power tubes, PI) which are not predictable easily. Oh and he writes awesome stuff on his PCBs!
If you only care about the tonal advantages instead of the dynamic sort of aspect of it a good eq, especially parametric in a good loop is much much more usefull in my opinion and you can actually take it out whenever you want.
You can go all control crazy in many places in an amp but it can become more of a hindrance than an advantage. Imagine: controllable bias in the preamp tubes, pressence (in the cathode) in every one of them, mid sweep extra, variable negative feedback control, selectable tonestack values, input gain, gain (distortion), two master volumes, master defeat, selectable bias settings for one type of power tubes (cold warm etc a-la dv mark or fender supersonic 100), pressonance, gain pot for two preamp tubes (a-la deliverance), negative feedback defeat (recto modern or mark IV extreme), tonestack defeat (a-la fuchs ODS), bright caps, triode/pentode/half power switch on the power amp or whatever the designer can think of.
You end up with a do it all spaceship without actually having a certain identity of sorts which can be a good thing for the tweaker and maybe a nightmare when you gig! And pray that nothing breaks or drifts because good luck trouble shooting it!
tschrama":15esmsxp said:Because he was building amps is the 50's?![]()
DAMIAN The MAN":2upvxptp said:I don't remember heard about it until the PV 5150 came out in 1991, but my memory is way too selective.
Bozo-Breath":d4tymgpa said:tschrama":d4tymgpa said:Because he was building amps is the 50's?![]()
No, only since the 60's. Nobody was really doing anything with feedback before the early to mid 80's except having it or not having it, with the exception of some esoteric Hi-Fi gear.....
Steven Fryette
tschrama":3okbd018 said:Bozo-Breath":3okbd018 said:tschrama":3okbd018 said:Because he was building amps is the 50's?![]()
No, only since the 60's. Nobody was really doing anything with feedback before the early to mid 80's except having it or not having it, with the exception of some esoteric Hi-Fi gear.....
Steven Fryette
Methods of selective feedback to alter the transfer function are much older, in a more general electronics context. That was the gist of my reply.
But within the context of guitar amplifiers, I am amazed to hear it from the first person to introduce it! It sure got a lot of following in many brands. Mesa power amp from the early 90's have it, like 395, 500, although th 295, and 400 don't have it. Was Mesa following your design?
I do doubt a resonance control would be accepted by the patent office. As it is just a new application of prior art. Was the presence circuit ever patented?