tauzero Posted Thursday at 14:51 Share Posted Thursday at 14:51 Bought from Andertons when the price dropped. A minor annoyance was the jack-only output as I know I have a short jack-jack speaker lead but no idea where it is, so had to make one up when it arrived. Had a little test with the newly repaired house jam micro cab and all was well. I'm curious to know what other BAM200 owners have found with the signal LED - the instructions say to adjust the gain to just below where the LED occasionally comes on, but that would be about zero, and having the LED shining green most of the time doesn't seem to damage the tone. Does it turn red if clipping is happening? Should I just ignore it and go by ear? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lemmywinks Posted Thursday at 16:51 Share Posted Thursday at 16:51 (edited) The LED turns red to indicate clipping on these I think, the manual has always been a bit misleading and they never changed it. Edited Thursday at 16:52 by lemmywinks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
spongebob Posted Thursday at 17:00 Share Posted Thursday at 17:00 Would love to know more about how these really cut it, output wise…..the price is very tempting……😇 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tauzero Posted Thursday at 17:13 Author Share Posted Thursday at 17:13 An experiment was conducted to determine the nature of the signal diode's indication. The master volume was reduced to just above zero and the gain was adjusted to maximum. A bass on full volume was connected via a multieffects unit with a gain stage which was adjusted to maximum. With all necessary personal protective equipment in place, the amplifier was switched on. The LED was observed to shine green simply from ambient noise from the multieffects. On playing some notes, the LED was observed to change from green to red. Reducing the gain to approximately the 3 o'clock position showed no red indication from the LED. It was therefore concluded that the signal LED shines green for an audio input and red where clipping is occurring. Ah, we knew how to write up our A-level physics experiments in the 1970s. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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