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5W Valve Amp, replacement valve advice?


AustinArto
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Today on a whim I drove down to Gear4Music and bought a little 5W valve guitar head. I thought it would make a handy practise amp at home.

Anyway, long story short it sounds way too bright and it's too bloody loud to crank the clean channel and see how it warms up, so I was wondering if swapping out the tubes might be a worthwhile exercise?

I'm not really bothered about dirt, but I would like to get a big, fat sound at lower volume. It's one of these:

http://www.gear4music.com/Guitar-and-Bass/SubZero-Tube-H5-Guitar-Amp-Head/NE1

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Ah right. It can put out a lot of bass if I roll the tone off on my bass but it's naturally very bright-sounding. I plugged my Strat into it too and that was also mega-bright even on the neck pup.

I don't really know anything about amps if I'm honest certainly not guitar amps and not valve amps either, never had one before.

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AX84.com, and Merlin [url="http://www.valvewizard.co.uk/"]http://www.valvewizard.co.uk/[/url] are good starting points. You can change the 12AX7 for a 5751 or 12AT7 valve (in UK money ECC83, ECC82, ECC81 - not sure without detailed looking if ECC82 is the equivalent of 5751). There is a whole world of gain out there [url="http://www.valveshouse.fr/gain-des-12ax7-12at7-12au7-12ay7-5751/"]http://www.valveshou...au7-12ay7-5751/[/url] Apologies it is in French but quite understandable (and google is your friend).

Do not fork out on 'vintage' valves for 'tone'. I am not convinced how electrons passing through a vacuum shape 'tone'. Vintage Mullards, Pinnacle etc may well be better built, however pre amp valves are by their nature tough / robust.

Edited by 3below
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The old trick 'back then', when an amp was too loud when 'cranked', was to tip the cab onto its front on carpet. That cut the harshness and muffled the tone very well. Try that, maybe..? ;)

Edited by Dad3353
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What speaker are you using with it?

Personally I would probably modify the amp, but if you're not comfortable with amps and high-voltage electronics that could be dangerous, whereas switching to a different speaker with less treble response and a lower efficiency would be a safe way to reduce the treble and volume.

Unless they're faulty or worn out, changing tubes is a subtle business, and even if you substitute e.g a lower gain preamp tube there's a good chance the frequency response will be similar (because it's mostly a product of the internal circuit design).

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Currently using either my Schroeder 212 or a little Marshall 12" guitar cab. It actually sounds better with a bass through it, my strat sounds very, very bright. I plugged in a reverb from my Eventide H9 earlier and it sounded decent though! And the dirty channel actually sounds pretty good. Still wish it was quieter. :(

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  • 4 years later...

I've  got one of these sub zero 5 watt valve heads . first thing i noticed was its way too bright  even with the treble turned to zero!  The gain channel was too fierce and with humbuckers  could hardly get the gain above 2. Changed the pre amp valve to a ecc82 that tamed it a bit better.

Opening up the amp and looking at the volume pot on the circuit board there is a capacitor acting like a treble bleed  bypass on a guitar vol. pot  it is to the left marked C17 i removed this and its now a lot better still bright but nothing like the ice pick it was hope this is of help to anybody

 

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Given the price of the amp, changing valves (or at least, more than one of them) would not be a cost effective option. Assuming it has separate pre and power sections (it may not at 5w) you could look into substituting the preamp valve for a lower gain version.

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Don't mess around with cap values - it's too easy to get lost that way. If the 'lil' amp uses a 12AX7/ECC83 try swapping it out for a 12AT7/ECC81. You could also try a 12AU7/ECC82. These are all pin compatible but each has less gain that the one before. See if one will suit your purposes better.

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  • 2 weeks later...

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