Sarno Blackbox?
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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Sarno Blackbox?
Anyone using a Sarno Blackbox? If so, please share your experiences with us.
Thanks
Craig
Thanks
Craig
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B.b
Had one ,didn't hear that much difference. Now play over N400/ Fox intense mod, DD2, Sonic Max, HILTON VP
had that set up for years. and love it.
had that set up for years. and love it.
- Brooks Montgomery
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- Mike Wheeler
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Agreed. Warm-up is critical to getting the most out of a BB. And, yes, it's subtle. I played through mine for about a month and started thinking...this thing doesn't seem to be all that great. So, I took it out of my signal chain. Boy oh boy was I wrong. My steel suddenly sounded sterile and flat. Put the BB back in the chain and the world was right again.
I won't be without it ever again. It really does sweeten the sound. Thanks again, Brad!!!
I won't be without it ever again. It really does sweeten the sound. Thanks again, Brad!!!
Best regards,
Mike
Mike
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I agree with Mike. I have one and use it all the time with my gig setup. I have a separate setup at home for practice. Both setups I am playing through a Digitech GSP 1101 pre amp with cab simulation direct to the exact same PA and then to my monitor mix with same speaker cab. Guitar is different, but same BL 705 pickup. I hear the difference between my stage setup with the black box and my practice setup without it. The black box adds that warmth in the signal. I completely agree with "butter on a steak".
I don't leave home without it. I love the sound of my gig setup. Practice setup is dry.
I don't leave home without it. I love the sound of my gig setup. Practice setup is dry.
76 Emmons Push Pull, Williams 600, ShoBud Pro I, MSA Classic, Remington SteelMaster dbl 8, MSA Super Slide dbl 8, Gold Tone 6, And other instruments and equipment I can't afford.
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I have Brad's older model of Black Box, that pre-dates Sarno Music Solutions. It has all the features of a new one, and makes a definite difference in front of my Peavey 400, sweetens up the tone and gives me an extra level of control with the Vari-Z. I prefer Brad's Freeloader when playing through a tube amp.
- Per Berner
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- Brad Sarno
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One factor the Black Box offers that has really stood out in the many responses I've gotten from people over the years is its special ability to balance the low end with the high end. Many people with solid state rigs (no tubes) tend to struggle getting a clear sound on their low, wound strings and ALSO a sweet, smooth tone in the high registers, Hugheyland.
There's thing with solid state setups that makes the highs kind of hard, harsh, and glassy, so we tend to use our amp's EQ to mellow those highs and tame the harshness. But then we're left with very dull, dark low string tone. The tube in the Black Box does a really special thing in that it balances all the way up and down the spectrum; clear, shimmering low register tone and also sweet, smooth, UN-harsh highs.
I like to refer people to the Willie Nelson album 'You Don't Know Me - Songs of Cindy Walker". That's Buddy Emmons on steel. He did not like the cold, transistory tone of his little Peavey Nashville 112 amp. But when he added his Black Box to the setup he suddenly was very happy with it, and you can hear that Black Box + NV112 sound and how warm and smooth it is. That album is a nice example of what the Black Box does to a transistor rig. Notice how open and lush the midrange is, not dense or nasally "crowded" sounding.
B
There's thing with solid state setups that makes the highs kind of hard, harsh, and glassy, so we tend to use our amp's EQ to mellow those highs and tame the harshness. But then we're left with very dull, dark low string tone. The tube in the Black Box does a really special thing in that it balances all the way up and down the spectrum; clear, shimmering low register tone and also sweet, smooth, UN-harsh highs.
I like to refer people to the Willie Nelson album 'You Don't Know Me - Songs of Cindy Walker". That's Buddy Emmons on steel. He did not like the cold, transistory tone of his little Peavey Nashville 112 amp. But when he added his Black Box to the setup he suddenly was very happy with it, and you can hear that Black Box + NV112 sound and how warm and smooth it is. That album is a nice example of what the Black Box does to a transistor rig. Notice how open and lush the midrange is, not dense or nasally "crowded" sounding.
B
- Brad Sarno
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And by far, THE most common response I've gotten and continue to get regarding the Black Box is that at first people think it's "subtle". It really is a clean device with no real EQ shaping, a hi-fi tube buffer. So people don't necessarily realize entirely what's happening. But when they get to a gig a few weeks after incorporating the Black Box and building a tone around the new setup and then realize they forgot to bring their Black Box, they say the tone is then awful without it, hard to play. Something about getting used to it, to the "feel" and the smooth treble and midrange just becomes normal.
But take it away suddenly, and people realize it really wasn't all that subtle after all.
B
But take it away suddenly, and people realize it really wasn't all that subtle after all.
B
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An easy way to A/B the BB is if you have a stereo setup.
Put the BB on one amp and not the other.
I use a Walker Stereo Steel, and you can put the BB in one effects loop, then run the effects levels at 100%, and hear the diff.
That is just to hear what it does.
Even if you can't hear it at all, that knowledge that you have a tube in your otherwise Solid State rig, as the song says... It's a good feeling to know.
Put the BB on one amp and not the other.
I use a Walker Stereo Steel, and you can put the BB in one effects loop, then run the effects levels at 100%, and hear the diff.
That is just to hear what it does.
Even if you can't hear it at all, that knowledge that you have a tube in your otherwise Solid State rig, as the song says... It's a good feeling to know.
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- Tony Glassman
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- Brooks Montgomery
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Sarno BB only weighs as much as a bottle of Tennessee whiskeyTony Glassman wrote:I tried the BB twice....for a month each time. I concluded that while there was a subtle benefit to tone, it wasn't sufficient to justify hauling around the additional weight.
A banjo, like a pet monkey, seems like a good idea at first.
- Tony Glassman
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Yep......a half-gallonBrooks Montgomery wrote:Sarno BB only weighs as much as a bottle of Tennessee whiskeyTony Glassman wrote:I tried the BB twice....for a month each time. I concluded that while there was a subtle benefit to tone, it wasn't sufficient to justify hauling around the additional weight.
- Brooks Montgomery
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No, no , no. . .no.Tony Glassman wrote:Yep......a half-gallonBrooks Montgomery wrote:Sarno BB only weighs as much as a bottle of Tennessee whiskeyTony Glassman wrote:I tried the BB twice....for a month each time. I concluded that while there was a subtle benefit to tone, it wasn't sufficient to justify hauling around the additional weight.
Sarno BB= 3 lbs.
Jack Daniels 750 ml bottle full= 3 lbs.
for weight equal to a half gallon of tennessee whiskey , you can buy some more cool Sarno pedals. so you got that going for you.
A banjo, like a pet monkey, seems like a good idea at first.
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- Brooks Montgomery
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- Brad Sarno
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The tube is running and passing audio in about 15 seconds after power-up. After 5 minutes it's warmed over and is pretty close to being there. But after 20 minutes it seems that the entire circuit has reached temperature and has stabilized and the tube has reached its optimal tone zone.Nathan Gray wrote:....any idea how long the BB needs warm up to perform at its optimal? It's a wonderfully mysterious unit. I've been very happy with mine.
A brand new tube may need to run for a few dozen hours before it's settled in and shaken off some of that crisper "new tube" top end harder midrange. These changes are subtle, but they can be heard.
B
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The Black Box is subtle... but significant. Improved warmth, clarity, and quieter as well. Lap Steel brought me to this forum, but I mainly play jazz with archtop guitars (Gibson and Heritage) and I have found pristine clean warm rich jazz tone using Black Box, Sarno V8 Octal Tube Preamp, Jay Ganz Straight Ahead Power Amp into a high end jazz speaker cabinet (Buscarino 1x8). It's just the BEST tone I've found.., and I think the BB is a big part of that. I've found that the Steel Guitar wisdom transfers extremely well for archtop guitar.
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What I like about the Black Box is both it's gentle compression and the bass/ treble tweak achieved with the variance knob. As mentioned above, I use the BB with acoustic instruments where the compression adds clarity and, yes, subtle definition that I miss without it. In fact I have two so I can not be without at rehearsals.
2008 Zum D-10, 1996 Mullen PRP D-10, 1974 Emmons D-10, 1976 Emmons D-10, early 70s Emmons GS-10, Milkman Sideman head w/Telonics 15" speaker, 1966 Fender Super Reverb, 1970 Fender Dual Showman head, Wechter/Scheerhorn and Beard Dobros, 1962 Supro lap steels, Gibson 1939 RB-11 banjo, Gibson 1978 RB-250
banjo......and way too much more
banjo......and way too much more
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