Page 1 of 2
What 10" Speaker for Pedal Steel?
Posted: 19 Oct 2015 8:32 am
by Rick Contino
A quick search hasn't turned anything up on the forum.
I'd like something lightweight that could handle C6 as well as a 10" possibly can. I would have it in an open-back cab. I really like the sound of my 15" SICA, and if there is something with a similar sound in a 10" I'd be very interested.
Posted: 19 Oct 2015 8:54 am
by Richard Sinkler
I don't think you'll ever find a 10" that will sound close to a 15", especially for C6. But, depending on the wattage of the amp, my first choice would be a JBL. I'm sure there are some that are better and worse.
Posted: 19 Oct 2015 9:49 am
by Jerry Overstreet
Don't know how anything compares to a single 15 in a steel rig, but 12's work well....so a pair of 10's might be OK.
A friend of mine kept pestering to try his 4/10 Bassman with my steel....I didn't like it, but that might be just the amp and the way it was eq'ed.
If I was looking for 10's, probably the K110 JBL would be my choice for steel. HD enough to handle the C neck, I think.
Edit: BTW, does Eminence make a 10" in the EPS series? I know they have 12's like the TT [Travis Toy model] designed for steel.
Don't see a 10 like that for guitar, but they do have those in similar appearance for pro audio with good power rating.
http://www.eminence.com/pro-audio/neody ... 0#speakers. I'm sure they'd welcome inquiries as to how they work for instrument.
Lil' Buddy
Posted: 19 Oct 2015 10:18 am
by Luke Sullivan
Eminence Patriot Lil' Buddy works pretty well in my Fender 25R. Eighty bucks. Hemp cone handles bass. Probably a Tone Tubby would be good, though a little pricey.
10" speaker for C6th steel guitar
Posted: 19 Oct 2015 11:35 am
by Mike Brown
It would take a bit of R & D to determine how large the cabinet, what the port size should be and the SPL that is required. Haven't tried this yet, but I recommend the 1008-8HE Black Widow speaker. Good luck!
Posted: 19 Oct 2015 1:17 pm
by Paul Sutherland
It's my understanding that the early pedal steel players liked using the Fender Bassman with 4 10s. Just add a reverb and it's a pretty good amp with a lot of tonal character. I think there is something special about putting 4 ten inch speakers on one baffle.
Having said that, many years ago I had a silver face Fender Vibrolux (I think that was the model, maybe it was a Tremolux) with 2 10s and 2 6L6 power tubes putting out about 35 watts. I put two JBL inches speakers in it. It was great with a strat, but pretty whimpy for PSG.
Posted: 19 Oct 2015 5:58 pm
by Paul Arntson
Like Paul said "Four of them".
Re: 10
Posted: 19 Oct 2015 5:58 pm
by Les Cargill
Mike Brown wrote:It would take a bit of R & D to determine how large the cabinet, what the port size should be and the SPL that is required. Haven't tried this yet, but I recommend the 1008-8HE Black Widow speaker. Good luck!
http://www.linearteam.dk/?pageid=winisd
Posted: 19 Oct 2015 6:21 pm
by Ian Worley
It's not my regular rig on account of the fact it weighs about 437 pounds, but I can report that my Mesa 2x10 bass cabinet sounds pretty darn good for steel. I believe a lot of it is the size of the box and that it is tuned/ported for good bass response. I don't know what make/model the speakers are though.
Posted: 20 Oct 2015 1:10 am
by Olli Haavisto
Evans RE 200 with a Weber California. I've played clubs unmiked with no problems.
The amp goes into the seat, along with the volume pedal etc. Whole set up, two flight cases.
Posted: 20 Oct 2015 2:31 am
by Lane Gray
I was gonna suggest whatever ten that Scott Buffington puts in his amps.
It can handle the full range, but it'll never fool your ears into thinking you have a 15 in a deep-voiced cabinet. If you want that fat low end, you have to move some air.
In my younger days I had a Session 500, with an Acoustic 4X10 cab. That also sounded great
Posted: 20 Oct 2015 2:37 am
by Olli Haavisto
My amp originally had an Eminence Deltalite or something....
It was a lot lighter than the Weber and handled more power. Should have kept it.
Posted: 20 Oct 2015 5:32 am
by James Quackenbush
I play a U12 and the smallest speaker that I would go down to would be a 12" speaker .... Better yet , I would run 2 of them in a deep ported cab and plenty of power to move air .... You could use 10's but the bottom end is not pronounced enough for me ...It's thin sounding to my ears compared to 12's or even a 15" speaker ....Then again , it's all up to the individual ....I speak for myself only and what my needs are ... YMMV .... I own many amps and speaker cabs , including an older Tweed 4-10 Bassman ....Taking the line out of the 4-10's and running into a 15" speaker is another story altogether !!....Jim
Posted: 20 Oct 2015 1:47 pm
by Gary Meixner
With guitar speaker enclosures the norm seems to be a front loaded driver in a conveniently sized, open or closed back cabinet. This makes sense since these are the easiest cabinets to build, keeping costs down and maximizing portability and minimizing weight. I have always wondered though couldn't you build a full range enclosure that had enough bass response utilizing 10" full range driver. It may require a more advanced cabinet design where the cabinet mechanics play a more significant role. I understand how bass frequencies would require more air to be moved but aren't there other ways to achieve this then by radiating directly off the driver cone?
Gary
Posted: 20 Oct 2015 4:35 pm
by Ian Worley
My current bass rig is a Carvin BX500 into a Mesa 2x10 ported bass cabinet. It's way loud, very clean and punchy. The speakers are bass speakers with an appropriate bass frequency response curve, mounted in a properly designed enclosure. I can assure you it is not "thin" sounding, for bass or for steel. My other bass rig is a giant old Ampeg SVT, it has eight 10" speakers, large sealed enclosure the size of a small refrigerator. Far from thin sounding. They were a staple in all your finer giganto arenas worldwide throughout the 70s. Much more to consider here than just the diameter of the cone or voice coil, which is where everyone seems to focus.
Posted: 20 Oct 2015 6:23 pm
by Stephen Cowell
Gary Meixner wrote:... I have always wondered though couldn't you build a full range enclosure that had enough bass response utilizing 10" full range driver. It may require a more advanced cabinet design where the cabinet mechanics play a more significant role.
Google "Thiele/Small"... I'm sure wiki's got good stuff. That's what you're talking about, there... you can really tell when you're plugged into a properly ported cabinet, it sounds like 4x the size. Mesa and Bogner are just two of the many that make proper speaker cabinets with this kind of tuning.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thiele/Small
http://www.eminence.com/2011/06/sealed- ... nclosures/
Posted: 20 Oct 2015 7:16 pm
by James Quackenbush
When I mentioned "thin" sounding , I'm talking about taking the same cab size in cubick inches and style and running either 10" speakers or 15 " speakers ....Let's see ......We have an Ampeg SVT cab with 8 - 10's ......... Put 15" speakers in the same cab with the same area of speaker cone as the 10's , and see which one will have a deeper tone .......
Take a bassman cab that has 4-10's in it and play pedal stel thru it......Then throw in just one 15" speaker and see which one has the more full tone ....
Today you listen to bass players that have a bass style that is not deep and boomy , but tight and focused sounding , they are pleying thru a 2-10 or 4-10 cab .....
Take a different style bass player with a heavier bottom end ,and they will be playing thru at least one cab with a 15's speaker .... and one with 2 or 4 -10's
I'm not arguing the fact that the cabinet size plays an important role in how the instrument sounds ..... I totally agree ..... but take the same cabinet size and run 10's in one cab and 15's in the same size cab and the 10's will not be as full sounding ....
and as I said earlier , it's up to the individual, and what type of tone they are looking for . .....
Posted: 20 Oct 2015 9:22 pm
by Paul Sutherland
Anyone remember Bose 901 stereo speakers? Each cabinet had nine 4 inch full range speakers, eight pointed back and one pointed forward. They put out a surprising amount of low end.
I'm not convinced that you have to have a large speaker cone to get good bass response.
Posted: 21 Oct 2015 6:33 am
by Dustin Rhodes
Paul Sutherland wrote:Anyone remember Bose 901 stereo speakers? Each cabinet had nine 4 inch full range speakers, eight pointed back and one pointed forward. They put out a surprising amount of low end.
I'm not convinced that you have to have a large speaker cone to get good bass response.
You 100% do not need a 15" speaker for a full sound. You need a well designed speaker inside a well designed cabinet for that speaker. I'm primarily a bass player and have played plenty of cabs with 10's that do just fine with my 5 string.
None of what I just said should be taken as agreement that anything Bose has ever made actually sounds good.
Posted: 21 Oct 2015 7:21 am
by Alan W. Black
New to the instrument. I've always found this strong preference for 15" speakers very surprising. An E9 doesn't go as low in frequency as a six string does (83hz) and 15" among 6 stringers is unheard of. Is it really about lows? Or is it about the relatively reduced highs a 15" will almost certainly introduce, at least in the specs. ?
One of these days I'll summon the courage to ask about this super high wattage solid state amp thing, but let me check it out on my own first. Blows my mind. Open, maybe.
Also
- there are plenty of subwoofers in high end audio that have 10" drivers. And audiophile setups need to reproduce low organ notes, contrabasson, ect.
- you play steel through an Ampeg SVT head (two handles!) and the 8x10" Ampeg SVT cabinet? I want to go to your gig! I'll love it. I might be in a lawn chair in the parking lot, but I'll be very enthusiastic.
Posted: 21 Oct 2015 8:46 am
by Lane Gray
The high power is for headroom to keep microtonal intervals clear and clean.
They're more prone to break up and sound worse when they do.
Posted: 21 Oct 2015 8:46 am
by Dustin Rhodes
But for bass 10" woofers are the standard. Theres not a bass 10" out there that can't handle the low C or B on a steel.
Posted: 21 Oct 2015 10:36 am
by Ian Worley
Alan W. Black wrote:...you play steel through an Ampeg SVT head (two handles!) and the 8x10" Ampeg SVT cabinet?...
hee hee, I've never played my steel through the SVT but I should try it sometime just for fun. It will never be seen out on a steel gig though, I prefer portability (it hasn't even been out on a bass gig in years).